Patient and caregiver-reported acceptability of an automatic phone call offering supportive and palliative care referral for advanced non-small cell lung cancer patients.

Journal of Clinical Oncology(2022)

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e24097 Background: Timely palliative care interventions can help to alleviate the distress people experience after a diagnosis of an incurable, life-threatening cancer. However, referrals to palliative care continue to be late due to various provider and patient barriers. The Palliative Care Early and Systematic (PaCES)-Automatic study was co-designed with patients and providers and implemented an early palliative care intervention for newly diagnosed stage IV non-small lung cancer (NSCLC). The objective of this study was to determine patient/caregiver-reported acceptability of a phone call from a supportive and palliative care (SPC) nurse offering consultation, automatically (without referral) after first oncologist appointment. Methods: Two SPC specialist nurses screened out-patient clinic lists at a tertiary cancer center weekly and called all eligible patients offering an in-home consultation. Eligibility: > 18 years, newly diagnosed/suspected Stage IV NSCLC and had first medical/radiation oncologist visit. Patients/caregivers were surveyed about the acceptability (5-point Likert scale) of the automatic phone call offering a palliative care consult, using Sekhon’s Framework of Acceptability domains. Results: Among the 113 patients screened, 81 patients/caregivers were contacted and offered SPC consultation and 72% accepted the in-home consult. Of 70 patients/caregivers that agreed to be contacted for the survey: 4 did not recall the call offering SPC, 3 declined participating in the survey, and 15 were not reached. Of 48 respondents, 93.6% rated overall acceptability of the automatic call offering SPC consultation somewhat/completely acceptable, with the other 6.4% rating it as neither acceptable nor unacceptable. Of 35 patients/caregivers that completed the full survey: 31% caregivers, 63% female, 57% ≤65 years, 29% ≤high school education, 67% (n = 27) < $60,000 household income, 80% spoke only English/French, and 71% Caucasian. Within the domains of acceptability, 94.7% were comfortable receiving the call, 91.9% understood why they received it; 86.5% thought the call was a valuable; 69.5% thought the call helped them; 65.7% learned about SPC from the call; no one expressed concern that the SPC nurse had access to their contact/health information; 97.2% thought the call didn’t take much physical/emotional effort and were confident in their ability to participate (ask questions/make decisions). Conclusions: Nearly all patients/caregivers found the automatic SPC call offering consultation to be acceptable. Most patients agreed to the consultation offer. Routine calls offering SPC consultation may be a timely alternative to awaiting conventional referral by oncologists.
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