Accepted Manuscript Family Perceptions of Quality of Hospice Care in the Nursing Home Deborah Hwang , ScB Joan M. Teno , MD, MS Melissa Clark , PhD, MS Renée Shield , PhD Cindy Williams , BA David Casarett , MD, MA Carol Spence , RN, PhD PII:

S0885-3924(14)00249-8

DOI:

10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2014.04.003

Reference:

JPS 8667

To appear in:

Journal of Pain and Symptom Management

Received Date: 23 January 2014 Revised Date:

4 April 2014

Accepted Date: 29 April 2014

Please cite this article as: Hwang D, Teno JM, Clark M, Shield R, Williams C, Casarett D, Spence C, Family Perceptions of Quality of Hospice Care in the Nursing Home, Journal of Pain and Symptom Management (2014), doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2014.04.003. This is a PDF file of an unedited manuscript that has been accepted for publication. As a service to our customers we are providing this early version of the manuscript. The manuscript will undergo copyediting, typesetting, and review of the resulting proof before it is published in its final form. Please note that during the production process errors may be discovered which could affect the content, and all legal disclaimers that apply to the journal pertain.

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Original Article

14-00032R1

Family Perceptions of Quality of Hospice Care in the Nursing Home

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Deborah Hwang, ScB, Joan M. Teno, MD, MS, Melissa Clark, PhD, MS, Renée Shield, PhD, Cindy Williams, BA, David Casarett, MD, MA, and Carol Spence, RN, PhD

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Brown University (J.M.T., M.C., R.S., C.W.) Providence, Rhode Island; University of

Pennsylvania (D.C.), Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and National Hospice and Palliative Care

Address correspondence to: Joan M. Teno, MD, MS

Providence, RI 02912, USA

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121 South Main Street, Box G-S612

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Organization (C.S.), Alexandria, Virginia, USA

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E-mail: [email protected]

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Abstract Context. Nursing homes (NHs) are increasingly the site of hospice care. High quality of care is dependent on successful NH-hospice collaboration.

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Objectives. To examine bereaved family members’ perceptions of NH-hospice collaborations in terms of what they believe went well or could have been improved.

Methods. Focus groups were conducted with bereaved family members from five diverse

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geographic regions, and included participants from inner-city and rural settings, with oversampling of blacks.

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Results. Twenty-eight participants (14.8% African American, mean age 61.4 years) identified three major aspects of collaboration as important to care delivery. First, the majority (67.9%) voiced concerns with knowing who (NH or hospice) is responsible for which aspects of patient care. Second, nearly half (42.9%) stated concern about information coordination between

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the NH and hospice. Finally, 67.9% of participants mentioned the need for hospice to advocate for high-quality care rather than their having to directly do so on behalf of their family members.

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Conclusion. The important concerns raised by bereaved family members about NHhospice collaboration have been incorporated into the revised Family Evaluation of Hospice Care

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(FEHC), a post-death survey used to evaluate quality of hospice care. Key Words: Hospice, nursing home, quality care, family perception Running Title: Quality of Hospice in Nursing Homes Accepted for publication: April 29, 2014.

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Introduction Nursing homes (NHs) are an important site of death in the United States, with more than one of four adults dying in the NH setting (1). Since the 1986 extension of the Medicare Hospice

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Benefit to NH residents, NHs are increasingly serving as the site of hospice care. From 2005 to 2009, the number of Medicare hospice beneficiaries in NHs grew by 40% (2). By 2012, 17.2% of all hospice patients died in the NH setting (3). Existing research recognizes problems with

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collaboration between the hospice and NH as a major barrier in delivering high-quality care for NH residents at the end of life (4-7).

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In its 2013 final rule-making for long-term care facilities, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) emphasized hospices’ need to collaborate with NHs in order to ensure that hospice patients receive the same high quality of care in NHs as in their personal homes (8). Given this CMS final rule, our goal is to measure the quality of NH-hospice collaboration by

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adding on to an existing instrument for measuring quality of hospice care. The Family Evaluation of Hospice Care (FEHC) Survey is a National Quality Forum-endorsed instrument that the majority of hospices now use on a voluntary basis to monitor their quality of care. As a

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first step to developing a new module, we conducted focus groups with a diverse population of bereaved family members to examine from their unique perspectives the successes and

Methods

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shortcomings in the care provided by hospices in the NH.

Focus groups are a useful method for collecting qualitative data on complex concepts, such as issues in the quality of end-of-life care. This qualitative method allows for solidifying of theoretical concepts with specific quotations from individual participants, while potentially allowing researchers to analyze interactions among group participants (9-10). Between

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December 2010 and May 2011, five focus groups were conducted with bereaved family members of patients who died with hospice in the NH; these sessions took place throughout the northeastern, southern, and southwestern parts of the U.S. Family members were first contacted

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between six and 12 months after the patients’ deaths, through a letter describing the study’s goals and terms of participation. They were then contacted via telephone approximately two weeks after receipt of the letter to screen for eligibility and determine interest in participating in a group

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discussion.

The focus group discussions were based on a moderator’s guide designed to elicit family

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members’ perceptions of hospice care in NHs. Within this overall goal, a main focus of the moderator’s guide was to explore the bereaved family members’ observations of the coordination of care between NH and hospice. Focus group participants were prompted to tell their stories through open-ended questions such as:

What were some good and bad experiences in the NH before hospice got involved?



Once hospice got involved in the patient’s care, what went well? What could have been

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improved?

How well did the NH and hospice staff members interact with one another?



Between the NH and hospice, how well was care was coordinated? What could have

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been improved?

Each focus group discussion lasted approximately 90 minutes, after which each participant was compensated $50 for his or her time. The discussions were moderated by the study’s coinvestigator (M.C.) and observed by the principal investigator (J.M.T.) and research assistant (C.W.), both of whom made independent notes of their observations. Focus group participants

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were informed that this study was part of the research team’s ultimate goal of improving patientcentered and family-focused hospice care. All focus group discussions were audiotaped and transcribed. The transcripts and notes

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from all sessions were analyzed to identify major themes of concerns that participants repeatedly voiced, citing both positive and negative experiences. The main goal of analysis was to identify those aspects of NH-hospice collaboration that participants seemed to believe most impacted

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quality of care for their deceased family member. Content analysis was conducted by J.M.T. and D.H. After review of the transcripts, J.M.T. outlined three major themes of concerns and

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discussed these themes with the team of co-authors; areas of disagreement were resolved through group discussion to reach consensus. After identification of the major themes, all transcripts were reviewed once more by D.H. to quantify the proportion of participants who brought up experiences or concerns corresponding to each category. This project was approved by the

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Institutional Review Board of Brown University. Results

A total of 28 focus group participants were recruited from five hospices. These hospices

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varied in location (rural to urban), minority composition (one with inner-city minority population), and geographic region (New England, Mid-Atlantic, South-East, and South-Central

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locations of the U.S.). Participants were family members of hospice patients who died with receipt of hospice services in the NH. Table 1 characterizes the participants. Three predominant themes of concerns emerged from the analysis: 1) clear delegation of responsibilities between NH and hospice staff regarding specific tasks comprising patient care; 2) information coordination between the NH staff and hospice staff; and 3) bereaved family members’ need for hospice to act as an advocate for the patient and family, as well as a

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moderator helping resolve concerns with the quality of care. Table 2 summarizes the number of sites and participants who verbalized positive or negative experiences corresponding to each of the three themes.

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Theme 1: Clear Distribution of Responsibilities in Tasks for Patient Care

Family members at all five sites identified the coordination of care between NH and hospice as an important determination of the quality of end-of-life care. The predominant

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concern was the perception that the NH would avoid providing care, and instead wait for hospice

patient, as illustrated by this quotation:

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staff to provide that care. These concerns often focused on bathing or changing an incontinent

When my mother come from the hospital and they was setting up, hospice for her, they-the people, you know, the workers at the nursing home were waiting for hospice to come in to do their work

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so they didn’t want to do anything anymore and they let my mother stay in the bed wet and her bag leak and so you know, the head, they fired three people. So when hospice came in, I was really

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pleased because they, you know, they kept my mother clean. They came, you know, came in every single morning and they bathed

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her. (58 y/o African-American woman whose mother died on hospice services in an inner-city NH)

A second illustrative quotation focuses on the changing of a colostomy bag in a dying cancer patient, and further illustrates the distress caused to both the patient and family member when caregiving tasks are not clearly delegated between NH and hospice staff:

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My situation was that the NH staff would deliberately not do something if they knew that that was a time that we could expect hospice to come [Mod: Okay.] so they used it as an opportunity not

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to have to deal with my mother, which I wouldn’t let them get

away with because who was my check going to? It was going to

the NH. (52 y/o white woman recalling her role in advocating for

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her dying mother)

The participant then stated her concerns with the NH nurse not changing the colostomy bag:

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…for example, she had colon cancer so the NH would never

change her bag. They always waited for hospice. Well, give me a break. You know, change her bag.

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In contrast, there were stories of successful collaboration that resulted in “seamless integration” between the NH and hospice staff:

At [NH] they’re just an integrated team. [Mod: Okay.] They, [NH]

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provides them, hospice with an office and they’re part of the overall care team and I viewed it as seamless integration between

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the hospice and the [NH] nurses. (64 y/o son recalling the dying of his mother in a NH)

Theme 2: Information Coordination Between NH and Hospice Staff Participants at all five hospice programs raised concerns of information coordination between the NH and hospice staff. As voiced by one participant, hospice did not have the “pulse

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on [the patient] day to day,” and the family member did not know whether to raise concerns to the hospice or to the NH: Personally, I knew who was who. [Mod: Okay.] But it was

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difficult to know who to raise issues or concerns to. [Mod: Okay,

can you speak a bit more about that?] Ahh, I can’t. I was trying to rack my brain the last few days. He passed away in April so it

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kind of gets, what I remember, I was, I kind of sensed that hospice didn’t quite have their pulse on his day to day, like they would

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come and talk to him, interview him or whatever, just chat with him, always seemed pretty good. But he had moments of real confusion and anguish because his confusion. And they didn’t seem to see that and I don’t blame them. (68 y/o participant whose

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father died in a NH from a cerebrovascular accident)

This is contrasted with the experience of an 81-year-old wife of a cancer patient who died

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in a NH. The wife described a hospice case manager who was aware of the medical decisions made for the patient and would explain them to the family:

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However, being a large facility, I didn’t know many, how many patients she was seeing. His regular nursing care was done by the [NH name] staff. However, hospice seemed to know everything that was going on all along and the one time I did find hospice information valuable was my doctor came, our private doctor came to see [name] and then when he left, one of the [NH name] nurses

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said, they’ve taken his, some of his medicines away and I asked which ones. Well, they happened to be his two main heart medications. And so of course, I had a question about that and I

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was able to go out and ask the hospice nurse why they had done that and she explained to me…

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Theme 3: Hospice’s Role in Advocating for the Patient and Family and Resolving Concerns With Quality of Care

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Families often take on the role of advocating for their loved ones in the NH setting (11). Family members voiced the burden of such responsibility, expressing a need for hospice to take on more of this advocate role on behalf of patients and families. According to a 60-year-old African American caring for his aunt who died in an inner-city NH with hospice services:

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I think part of the problem is this here like, what authority do the hospice have over their patients once they put them in these nursing homes? Because it seems that some of these nursing

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homes don’t like that authority that comes in. In other words, it’s,

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you’re in our place. Y’all coming in and telling us how to do certain things, a lot of people don’t like that.

A similar concern was echoed by a 52-year-old daughter whose mother died in a NH after a hospitalization that was unwanted:

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And really people in that position [as caregiver], well, I think most people in that position, don’t have the energy to devote to sorting stuff like that out because you’re focusing on your loved one and

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so I found that to be frustrating… [My mother] fell and we had DNRs and all that kind of stuff out the kazoo but for whatever

reason, she was rushed to an emergency room and they start, you

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know, doing all these things to her and I’m running, I’m running to the place where they told me she was but because my mother was

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blind in one eye and they failed to notice that, they thought her eyes were unresponsive so they took her to a head trauma hospital thinking that that was, even worse… So I’m, I’m at the other hospital and “How can I possibly beat the ambulance?” So you

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know, go to the other [hospital] and I’m running with my DNRs and you know, my power of attorney and all this stuff… And hospice afterwards goes, “Wow, we really wished we could have

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helped intervene in that case.” And I’m like, “Gosh, me too.” You know, because they were squeezing the last bit of blood my mother

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had in her body out to try to do some blood tests, which was stupid. So I just felt like hospice wasn’t powerful enough because they were on my side but they weren’t powerful enough.

Yet, there were also stories of hospices quickly intervening when the family member reported a concern and helping to rectify the situation by advocating for the dying patient and family:

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But the one crisis that we had, the skilled nursing section had a substitute nurse who looked in on my mother and saw that she was

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sleeping and then never went back and so when I called to check

on her in the morning, she was again experiencing pain, frightened, alone, except for the woman in the bed next to her and I was

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actually talking to the woman in the bed next to her who said,

“She’s frightened.” And I said, “Why?” And she said, “Well, I

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haven’t seen a nurse.” And I immediately called hospice cause I was really annoyed about this. I was-I was beyond annoyed. And I’m only about 15 minutes away from the facility where my mother was. Hospice beat me there… As I’m walking down the

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hall to the nursing director and I hear the [hospice] nurse saying, “What is it you don’t understand about hospice?” And she’s got my mother’s records. The chaplain was already in with my

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mother. The social worker arrived along with me. I mean, it was, I don’t even know how they got there that fast. But they were and

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that was the end. I never had another, they were wonderful. (58year-old woman whose mother received hospice services in the NH)

Discussion

Nursing homes increasingly serve as the site of hospice care (1). With two separate entities partnered in delivering hospice care in the NH setting, collaboration is a key determinant

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in delivering quality care for patients and their families. Multiple studies report on the ideological, as well as pragmatic, challenges for NH and hospices in achieving optimal collaboration (4-7). Parker Oliver and colleagues, for example, have investigated the use of

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telemedicine as a tool for improved communication and collaboration among all those

participating in the care of the hospice patient (12). Other studies report on the many benefits that successful NH-hospice collaboration brings to NH residents and their families, including

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improved symptom assessment and management, as well as prevention of end-of-life hospitalizations (13-15).

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In a 2012 study, Williams and colleagues found that family caregivers in long-term care facilities end up assuming much of the direct and indirect tasks that are assumed to be the responsibility of hospice or NH staff. In fact, 40% of family caregivers provided care like bathing, toileting, or dressing (16). Although close involvement of family members could be a

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positive finding, these heavily involved caregivers also reported higher role strain, corroborating other studies’ finding that family caregivers’ perspectives must be gathered on their desired role and need for support (17-21). Importantly, the high assumption of caregiving burden by families

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also calls into question whether NH and hospice staff are successfully collaborating to get tasks adequately and timely accomplished. Our study attempted to understand from the unique

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perspective of family members the key factors of NH-hospice collaboration that contribute to quality hospice care in the NH. Through focus groups with bereaved family members, we identified three important aspects of successful care delivery: clear delegation of tasks and responsibilities, information coordination between NH and hospice staff, and hospice’s important role as an advocate for the patient and family. The ultimate goal of this study was to develop questions for a new module of

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the FEHC survey, which will serve as a performance measurement tool to ensure quality care for the increasing population of patients receiving hospice services in the NH setting. Table 3 includes the survey items resulting from analysis of the focus groups; items will be tested in the

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validation phase of this study.

First, families valued having a clear idea of which tasks each entity (NH or hospice) was responsible for. In its 2013 final rule, CMS noted that delivery of uncoordinated, overlapping, or

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conflicting services may arise secondary to the fact that similar basic tasks are covered in two ways, by the Medicare Hospice Benefit to hospices and by third-party payers to NHs (8). Our

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participants voiced how hospice presence in the NH can actually lead to a complete lack of certain basic services, as NH staff would purposefully wait around for hospice to come and attend to caregiving tasks like changing colostomy bags or bathing. Second, information coordination was a major concern for bereaved family members.

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High-quality end-of-life care is dependent on a shared care plan between the NH and hospice, as well as on the sharing of information regarding the patient’s clinical condition and clinical problems that can be expected while dying. Often, hospice is not in the NH facility on a daily

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basis; therefore, effective communication between NH and hospice staff is imperative to update and coordinate patient care, especially when changes in the patient’s condition occur. With two

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caregiving entities providing care and not necessarily communicating effectively with each other, family members expressed frustration at the added burden of serving as a channel through which the patient’s needs would have to be relayed. NH and hospice providers themselves also have identified improved communication as the key means to improving NH-hospice collaboration in delivering quality end-of-life care (22). One study by Price and Lau used interviews with end-oflife health care providers to investigate how information coordination contributes to quality of

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care for dying patients (23). A few other studies have explored the role of information coordination, but exclusively in the context of coordination of care during transitions through different non-hospice care providers (24-25). Our study suggests the need to further characterize

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the benefits of information coordination specifically in the context of hospice care in NHs. Third, families emphasized the important role of hospice in advocating for the patient and family in the NH setting. It is already known that family members are often forced to make

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personal and professional sacrifices to actively take on the advocate role for family members in the NH (7). Many family members in our focus groups perceived the NH as an understaffed

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facility where they themselves had to actively advocate for adequate care for their family members. Our finding is consistent with that of multiple previous studies, which emphasized the important role of hospice as an advocate for patients and their families (26-27). There are important limitations that should be acknowledged in this study. First, only

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explicitly stated opinions and voiced affirmations were considered for counts as focus group discussions were only audio-taped. Second, typical of a qualitative study, we used persons who volunteered for participation. However, 28 participants and five different focus groups are robust

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numbers for qualitative research. Also, we were able to ensure sociodemographic diversity in our focus group participants, with an over-sampling (14.8%) of African Americans. Moreover, the

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five participating hospice programs were varied in geographic location across the U.S., and included programs in rural as well as inner-city settings. Given that this is a qualitative study, we believe that this diversity adds strength to our findings. Given the increasing number of hospice beneficiaries in NHs and the recognized importance of NH-hospice collaboration, we aimed to develop a survey tool to measure quality of care for those individuals receiving hospice services delivered in NHs. Focus groups with a

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diverse sample of bereaved family members helped us identify three factors that influence the quality of hospice care in the NH, which we used to develop questions to add as a new module to the FEHC survey. The next phase of this study is to validate the new module in these hospice

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programs to ensure the advancement of more person- and family-centered hospice care in the NH setting.

In order to achieve improved NH-hospice collaboration and perform better on our survey

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tool, experts are suggesting key ways for hospices to work more synergistically with NHs. For example, Miller proposes that hospices change their infrastructures to better accompany the

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unique NH setting (e.g., hiring nurses with NH backgrounds, creating teams dedicated to NH care). She also stresses the importance of NH and hospice administrators’ acknowledgement of their different approaches to care, while working towards alignment of their cultures and philosophies regarding care (28-29). It is our hope that our NH-specific survey module will help

hospice care for NH residents.

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measure, and ultimately advance, NH-hospice collaboration for patient-centered, family-focused

Disclosures and Acknowledgments

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This project, Family Evaluation of Hospice Care, was funded by grant no. AHRQ 1R01HS019675 to principal investigator Joan M. Teno, MD, MS. The authors declare no

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conflicts of interest. References

(1) Teno J. Brown atlas of dying in the United States: 1998-2001. Providence, RI: Brown University, 2002.

(2) Levinson DR. Medicare hospices that focus on nursing facility residents. Washington, DC: Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Inspector General, 2011.

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(3) National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization. Facts and figures: Hospice care in America. Alexandria, VA: National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization, 2013. (4) Hirschman KB, Kapo JM, Straton JB, et al. Hospice in long-term care. Ann Long Term Care

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2005;13:25-29.

(5) Parker-Oliver D, Bickel D. Nursing home experience with hospice. J Am Med Dir Assoc 2002;3:46-50.

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(6) Miller SC, Teno JM, Mor V. Hospice and palliative care in nursing homes. Clin Geriatr Med 2004;20:717-734.

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(7) Wetle T, Teno J, Shield R, Welch LC, Miller SC. End of life in nursing homes: Experiences and policy recommendations. Report #2004-14. Washington, DC: AARP Public Policy Institute, 2004.

(8) Medicare and Medicaid Program. Requirements for long term care facilities; hospice

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services. Department of Health and Human Services: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Federal Register 2013;78(124):38594-38606.

(9) Teno JM, Casey VA, Welch LC, Edgman-Levitan S. Patient-focused, family-centered end-

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of-life medical care: views of the guidelines and bereaved family members. J Pain Symptom Manage 2001;22:738-751.

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(10) Morgan DL. Reconsidering the role of interaction in analyzing and reporting focus groups. Qual Health Res 2010;20:718-722. (11) Wetle T, Shield R, Teno J, Miller SC, Welch L. Family perspectives on end-of-life care experiences in nursing homes. Gerontologist 2005;45:642-650.

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(12) Parker Oliver D, Dermis G, Wittenberg-Lyles, Porock D. The use of videophones for patient and family participation in hospice interdisciplinary team meetings: a promising approach. Eur J Cancer Care (Engl) 2010;19:729-735.

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(13) Miller S, Mor V, Wu N, Gozalo P, Lapane K. Does receipt of hospice care in nursing hoes improve the management of pain at the end of life? J Am Geriatr Soc 2002;50:507-515.

nursing homes. J Pain Symptom Manage 2003;26:791-799.

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(14) Miller SC, Mor V, Teno J. Hospice enrollment and pain assessment and management in

home. J Am Geriatr Soc 2000;48:879-882.

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(15) Baer WM, Hanson LC. Families’ perception of the added value of hospice in the nursing

(16) Williams SW, Zimmerman S, Williams CS. Family caregiver involvement for long-term care residents at the end of life. J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci 2012;67:595-604. (17) Andershed B. Relatives in end-of-life care – part 1: a systematic review of the literature in

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the five last years, January 1999 – February 2004. J Clin Nurs 2006;15:1158-1169. (18) Bauer M, Nay R. Family and staff partnerships in long-term care. J Gerontol Nurs 2003;29:46-53.

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(19) Duncan MT, Morgan DL. Sharing the caring: family caregivers’ views of their relationships with nursing home staff. Gerontologist 1994;34:235-244.

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(20) Reid RC, Chappell NL, Gish JA. Measuring family perceived involvement in individualized long-term care. Dementia 2007;6:89-104. (21) Tornatore JB, Grant LA. Family caregiver satisfaction with the nursing home after placement of a relative with dementia. J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci 2004;59:80-88.

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(22) Miller S. Nursing home hospice partnerships: a model for collaborative success – through collaborative solutions. Providence, RI: Brown Medical School, 2007. Available from http://www.nhpco.org/sites/default/files/public/nhhp-final-report.pdf.

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(23) Price M, Lau FY. Provider connectedness and communication patterns: extending

continuity of care in the context of the circle of care. BMC Health Serv Res 2013; 13:309. (24) McMurray J, Stolee P, Hicks E, et al. The role of documentation and inter-provider

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information exchange in care continuity for older hip fracture patients. Stud Health Technol Inform 2013;192:1197.

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(25) Mudge AM, Shakhovskoy R, Karrasch A. Quality of transitions in older medical patients with frequent readmissions: opportunities for improvement. Eur J Intern Med 2013;24:779-783. (26) Shield RR, Wetle T, Teno J, Miller SC, Welch LC. Vigilant at the end of life: family advocacy in the nursing home. J Palliat Med 2010;13:573-579.

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(27) Teno JM, Casey VA, Welch LC, Edgman-Levitan S. Patient-focused, family-centered endof-life medical care: views of the guidelines and bereaved family members. J Pain Symptom Manage 2001;22:738-751.

2010;13:525-533.

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(28) Miller SC. A model for successful nursing home-hospice partnerships. J Palliat Med

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(29) Miller SC. Nursing Home/Hospice Partnerships: A Model for Collaborative SuccessThrough Collaborative Solutions. NHPCO 2007. AU: ISN’T THIS THE SAME AS REFERENCE 22?

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Table 1. Focus Group Participant Characteristics

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Total Number of Participants (n)

67.9%

Female

61.4 yrs.

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Average Age

14.8%

African American Spouse

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Relationship to Patient

14.3% 67.9%

Other

17.8%

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Child

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Table 2. Number of Sites & Participants With Major Concerns

5 (100)

Concerns with information coordination

5 (100)

4 (80%)

12 (42.9)

19 (67.9)

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Hospice’s role in advocating for the patient and resolving concerns with the quality of care

19 (67.9)

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Who is responsible for what?

Number of Participants, of 28 total (%)

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Number of Sites, of 5 total (%)

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Theme

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Table 3. FEHC Survey Items by Theme Survey Item

Clear distribution of responsibilities in tasks for patient care

Hospices should ensure that NH residents and/or their families are provided with clear explanations of which services will be provided by whom, and that NH residents and families’ needs are met.



How often were the patient’s personal care needs – such as bathing, dressing, and changing bedding – not taken care of because the nursing home staff expected the hospice staff to do the personal care?

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Normative Statement

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Theme



How often did information about the patient’s differ between the nursing home staff and the hospice team?

Hospice and NH work together as a team so both are informed about the patient’s condition and can develop a shared care plan.



How often did the nursing home and hospice staff work together as a team?

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Hospice staff listens to concerns of Hospice’s role in advocating for the patient quality and provides a timely response to those concerns. and resolving concerns with the quality of care Hospice advocates for the best possible quality of life of the dying patient.

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Were you provided with enough information from hospice to know which concerns to discuss with the nursing home staff and which concerns to discuss with hospice?

Timely communication to update the caregiver about the patient’s condition, what to expect, and what he/she can do.

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Concerns with information continuity

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How often was the hospice team aware of the patient’s condition?



After hospice became involved, how often did you feel that you were on your own to advocate for the patient?

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Family perceptions of quality of hospice care in the nursing home.

Nursing homes (NHs) are increasingly the site of hospice care. High quality of care is dependent on successful NH-hospice collaboration...
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