“[It] is now my responsibility to fulfill that wish:” Clinical and rapid autopsy staff members’ experiences and perceptions of HIV reservoir research at the end of life

Introduction Little is known about the effects of HIV reservoir research at the end of life on staff members involved. Staff members’ perceptions and experiences were assessed related to their involvement in the Last Gift, a rapid autopsy study at the University of California San Diego enrolling peo...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kelly E. Perry, Jeff Taylor, Hursch Patel, Sogol Stephanie Javadi, Kushagra Mathur, Andy Kaytes, Susanna Concha-Garcia, Susan Little, Davey Smith, Sara Gianella, Karine Dubé, Manuel Fernández-Alcántara
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7673534/?tool=EBI
id doaj-172528a6f25a4941a9e432129155df66
record_format Article
spelling doaj-172528a6f25a4941a9e432129155df662020-11-25T04:12:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-011511“[It] is now my responsibility to fulfill that wish:” Clinical and rapid autopsy staff members’ experiences and perceptions of HIV reservoir research at the end of lifeKelly E. PerryJeff TaylorHursch PatelSogol Stephanie JavadiKushagra MathurAndy KaytesSusanna Concha-GarciaSusan LittleDavey SmithSara GianellaKarine DubéManuel Fernández-AlcántaraIntroduction Little is known about the effects of HIV reservoir research at the end of life on staff members involved. Staff members’ perceptions and experiences were assessed related to their involvement in the Last Gift, a rapid autopsy study at the University of California San Diego enrolling people living with HIV who are terminally ill and have a desire to contribute to HIV cure-related research. Methods Two focus group discussions consisting of clinical (n = 7) and rapid research autopsy (n = 8) staff members were conducted to understand the perspectives of staff members and the impact the Last Gift rapid autopsy study had on them. The total sample consisted of 66.7% females and 33.3% males and was ethnically diverse (66.7% Caucasian, 6.7% African American, 20.0% Asian descent, 6.7% Hispanic descent and American Indian) with a range of experience in the HIV field from 1 year to 30 years. Results Qualitative focus group data revealed five major themes underlying study staff members’ multilayered mental and practical involvement: 1) positive perceptions of the Last Gift study, with sub-themes including Last Gift study participants’ altruism, fulfillment, and control at the end of life, 2) perceptions of staff members’ close involvement in the Last Gift study, with sub-themes related to staff members’ cognitive processing, self-actualization and fulfillment, stress management and resilience, coping mechanisms, and gratitude toward Last Gift participants and toward the study itself, 3) considerations for successful and sustainable study implementation, such as ethical awareness and sustained community and patient engagement, 4) collaborative learning and organizational processes and the value of interdependence between staff members, and 5) considerations for potential study scale-up at other clinical research sites. Discussion Understanding staff members’ nuanced emotional and procedural experiences is crucial to the Last Gift study’s sustainability and will inform similar cure research studies conducted with people living with HIV at the end of life. The study’s potential reproducibility depends on a robust research infrastructure with established, interdependent clinical and rapid autopsy teams, continuous community engagement, and an ethical and well-informed engagement process with people living with HIV.https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7673534/?tool=EBI
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kelly E. Perry
Jeff Taylor
Hursch Patel
Sogol Stephanie Javadi
Kushagra Mathur
Andy Kaytes
Susanna Concha-Garcia
Susan Little
Davey Smith
Sara Gianella
Karine Dubé
Manuel Fernández-Alcántara
spellingShingle Kelly E. Perry
Jeff Taylor
Hursch Patel
Sogol Stephanie Javadi
Kushagra Mathur
Andy Kaytes
Susanna Concha-Garcia
Susan Little
Davey Smith
Sara Gianella
Karine Dubé
Manuel Fernández-Alcántara
“[It] is now my responsibility to fulfill that wish:” Clinical and rapid autopsy staff members’ experiences and perceptions of HIV reservoir research at the end of life
PLoS ONE
author_facet Kelly E. Perry
Jeff Taylor
Hursch Patel
Sogol Stephanie Javadi
Kushagra Mathur
Andy Kaytes
Susanna Concha-Garcia
Susan Little
Davey Smith
Sara Gianella
Karine Dubé
Manuel Fernández-Alcántara
author_sort Kelly E. Perry
title “[It] is now my responsibility to fulfill that wish:” Clinical and rapid autopsy staff members’ experiences and perceptions of HIV reservoir research at the end of life
title_short “[It] is now my responsibility to fulfill that wish:” Clinical and rapid autopsy staff members’ experiences and perceptions of HIV reservoir research at the end of life
title_full “[It] is now my responsibility to fulfill that wish:” Clinical and rapid autopsy staff members’ experiences and perceptions of HIV reservoir research at the end of life
title_fullStr “[It] is now my responsibility to fulfill that wish:” Clinical and rapid autopsy staff members’ experiences and perceptions of HIV reservoir research at the end of life
title_full_unstemmed “[It] is now my responsibility to fulfill that wish:” Clinical and rapid autopsy staff members’ experiences and perceptions of HIV reservoir research at the end of life
title_sort “[it] is now my responsibility to fulfill that wish:” clinical and rapid autopsy staff members’ experiences and perceptions of hiv reservoir research at the end of life
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description Introduction Little is known about the effects of HIV reservoir research at the end of life on staff members involved. Staff members’ perceptions and experiences were assessed related to their involvement in the Last Gift, a rapid autopsy study at the University of California San Diego enrolling people living with HIV who are terminally ill and have a desire to contribute to HIV cure-related research. Methods Two focus group discussions consisting of clinical (n = 7) and rapid research autopsy (n = 8) staff members were conducted to understand the perspectives of staff members and the impact the Last Gift rapid autopsy study had on them. The total sample consisted of 66.7% females and 33.3% males and was ethnically diverse (66.7% Caucasian, 6.7% African American, 20.0% Asian descent, 6.7% Hispanic descent and American Indian) with a range of experience in the HIV field from 1 year to 30 years. Results Qualitative focus group data revealed five major themes underlying study staff members’ multilayered mental and practical involvement: 1) positive perceptions of the Last Gift study, with sub-themes including Last Gift study participants’ altruism, fulfillment, and control at the end of life, 2) perceptions of staff members’ close involvement in the Last Gift study, with sub-themes related to staff members’ cognitive processing, self-actualization and fulfillment, stress management and resilience, coping mechanisms, and gratitude toward Last Gift participants and toward the study itself, 3) considerations for successful and sustainable study implementation, such as ethical awareness and sustained community and patient engagement, 4) collaborative learning and organizational processes and the value of interdependence between staff members, and 5) considerations for potential study scale-up at other clinical research sites. Discussion Understanding staff members’ nuanced emotional and procedural experiences is crucial to the Last Gift study’s sustainability and will inform similar cure research studies conducted with people living with HIV at the end of life. The study’s potential reproducibility depends on a robust research infrastructure with established, interdependent clinical and rapid autopsy teams, continuous community engagement, and an ethical and well-informed engagement process with people living with HIV.
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7673534/?tool=EBI
work_keys_str_mv AT kellyeperry itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT jefftaylor itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT hurschpatel itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT sogolstephaniejavadi itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT kushagramathur itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT andykaytes itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT susannaconchagarcia itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT susanlittle itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT daveysmith itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT saragianella itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT karinedube itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
AT manuelfernandezalcantara itisnowmyresponsibilitytofulfillthatwishclinicalandrapidautopsystaffmembersexperiencesandperceptionsofhivreservoirresearchattheendoflife
_version_ 1724415456693977088