# The Sowers of Seeds: A Qualitative Analysis of the Role of Palliative Care Educators in Facilitating Goals-of-Care Conversations and Palliative Care Referrals

**Authors:** Seth N. Zupanc, Lisa M. Quintiliani, Amy M. LeClair, Michael K. Paasche-Orlow, Angelo Volandes, Akhila Penumarthy, Lori Henault, Jennifer E. Itty, Aretha D. Davis, Joshua R. Lakin

PMC · DOI: 10.1177/10499091241267917 · The American Journal of Hospice & Palliative Care · 2024-08-28

## TL;DR

This study explores how Palliative Care Educators help improve conversations about care goals and access to palliative care in hospitals.

## Contribution

The study introduces and evaluates the role of Palliative Care Educators in facilitating goals-of-care discussions and palliative care referrals.

## Key findings

- Palliative Care Educators laid a foundation for future palliative care involvement.
- Establishing trust was crucial for accepting the new role of Palliative Care Educators.
- The new role helped reduce staff workload and increase patient engagement in care planning.

## Abstract

Optimal care for seriously ill and older patients often involves advance care planning (ACP), goals-of-care (GOC) conversations, and specialty palliative care consultation, three sometimes overlapping, yet distinct practices. Insufficient staffing and investment in these areas have limited their availability.

We explored the facilitators and barriers to successful implementation of the VIDEO-PCE trial. The intervention aimed to increase patient engagement in ACP, GOC, and by establishing Palliative Care Educators, a new clinical role integrated into existing hospital wards.

This qualitative interview study employed a semi-structured interview guide tailored to the interviewee’s clinical role. The interviews elicited perceptions of the facilitators and barriers to integration of palliative care educators (PCEs) into existing workflows. We developed deductive codes a priori and inductive codes as we coded interview transcripts.

Medical/surgical floor clinical colleagues, palliative care team members, and PCEs from both participating sites were interviewed.

Twenty-four individuals were interviewed (12 clinical staff of medical and surgical wards, seven palliative care team members, and five PCEs). Four themes were identified: (1) The work completed by the PCEs provided a foundation for future palliative care involvement; (2) Constituting the new role in practice required revision and creativity; (3) Communication was important to providing continuity of care; and (4) Establishing trust catalyzed the acceptance of the role.

The creation and implementation of a new role within existing clinical workflows posed some challenges but were felt to relieve staff from some work burden and allow more patients to engage in ACP and GOC conversations.

ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT04857060.

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12138154/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12138154