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Palliative Care in General Practice: Cancer Patient/Carer Experience

Conditions
Cancer
Interventions
Other: Qualitative interview
Registration Number
NCT03243188
Lead Sponsor
King's College London
Brief Summary

Study Title: Palliative care in general practice: cancer patients' and carers' experience of their GP's role

Study Design: Qualitative interview study

Study Participants: Adult patients with cancer and palliative care needs, accompanied by their carers

Planned Sample Size: Up to 30 interviews with patients +/- their carers

Planned Study Period: October 2017 - December 2018

Research Question: What experience do adults with cancer, and carers, have of their GP's involvement in palliative care provision?

Detailed Description

Participants will be invited and recruited to the study from St Joseph's Hospice in Hackney (single centre study). Patients with cancer that are either attending the day centre service at St Joseph's or being visited at home by the community specialist palliative care nursing/medical team based at St Joseph's Hospice; will be approached by their direct clinical care staff. (Some of the direct clinical care team are National Health Service (NHS) staff and some care is commissioned by the NHS despite St Joseph's Hospice being a non-NHS site). Staff will initiate discussion about the project, and will assess for both mental and physical capacity to participate.

Dr Emilie Green (EG) will then contact the potential participants by phone or in person (if they have previously given verbal consent for her to join their usual clinical staff on a home visit or when they are attending the day centre). The project will be discussed with each potential participant, and EG will answer any questions they may have, will assess for mental and physical capacity, and will arrange a mutually convenient time and location to meet for the interview.

Before starting the interview, EG will again make time to clarify any questions each participant may have. She will ask each participant to date/sign three consent forms before starting the interview (one for EG, one for the participant, and one for their notes at St Joseph's Hospice). If a joint interview is undertaken with a patient and their carer; both parties will individually sign their own consent forms. She will then ask questions relating to sociodemographic data (recording this on the Personal Information Sheet) e.g. age, living situation and diagnosis before starting the interview. The interviews will each last at least 30 minutes.

If participants decide that they would like a telephone interview, the process will be slightly different. EG will send three consent forms to each prospective participant (one for them to keep, and two for them to date/sign and send back by post) in a stamped addressed envelope. If the forms are not received within 3 weeks, EG will follow up with a phone call to the prospective participant, to clarify whether they still wish to participate. Only after she receives the two dated/signed consent forms will EG arrange a time with them for the telephone interview. She will then phone the participant from a private location that she does not share with other colleagues. She will collect sociodemographic information (which will be recorded on the Personal Information Sheet) before starting the interview (which will last at least 30 minutes.)

Qualitative data will be obtained through semi-structured interviews with adults with cancer and palliative care needs. Patients will be invited to bring their carer to the interview. EG will conduct and transcribe up to 30 audio-recorded semi-structured interviews, which will be carried out at the patient's preferred location (either at home, over the phone, or in a pre-booked room at St Joseph's Hospice). EG will ask questions relating to sociodemographic data (recording this on the Personal Information Sheet) prior to starting the interview.

EG will transcribe all interviews verbatim. Data will be analysed thematically and will adhere to the principles of the Framework Analysis developed by Ritchie and Spencer. Recurring themes and concepts will be identified using a constant comparative approach. Any contributions made by carers will be included and analysed as 'added value' data.This will enable us to explore if and how carers' perspectives contribute to our understanding of patient experience of their GP's involvement in palliative care.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
UNKNOWN
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
30
Inclusion Criteria

Not provided

Exclusion Criteria

Not provided

Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
ParticipantsQualitative interviewCancer patients with palliative care needs (+/- their carers)
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To explore the experience/perspectives of adults with cancer, and carers, of the role of their GP in providing palliative care, using a qualitative semi-structured interview scheduleOctober 2017 - December 2018

To explore patients' and carers' experience of:

1. The role of the GP in providing palliative care to adult patients with cancer

2. The facilitators and barriers to the GP's capacity to fulfill this perceived role

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

King's College London

🇬🇧

London, United Kingdom

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