Implementation of a Standardized Screening Process to Increase Palliative Care Referrals in Primary Care: An Evidence-Based Quality Approach.

Amy M Smith
Author Information
  1. Amy M Smith: Amy M. Smith, DNP, APRN, AGNP-C, CNE, is Medical University of South Carolina College of Nursing, Charleston. ORCID

Abstract

Despite initiatives to increase palliative care awareness, referrals in primary care settings are still primarily based on provider judgment, causing a lack of appropriate referrals and disparities in access to palliative care resources. The purpose of this quality improvement project was to develop and implement an evidence-based, standardized palliative care referral protocol to increase the palliative care referral rate for eligible patients at a primary care clinic. The project used a preimplementation and postimplementation design with the use of the RE-AIM (Reach, Effectiveness, Adoption, Implementation, and Maintenance) framework to successfully implement and evaluate the standardized referral process. Over the 10-month project period, the palliative care referral rate increased from 2% (4/193) preimplementation to 11% (16/147) postimplementation of the standardized referral process, which is an increase of 9%. Taking into consideration the potential impact of multiple extraneous variables, there was an overall decrease of 69% in emergency room visits and 73% in hospitalizations for patients who received a palliative care referral. These outcomes support expansion of the standardized referral process throughout other primary care clinics to increase palliative care referrals and sustain a high level of quality patient care.

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MeSH Term

Humans
Referral and Consultation
Primary Health Care
Palliative Care
Quality Improvement
Mass Screening
Female
Male

Word Cloud

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