An exploration of Doctor's perceptions and the provision of Palliative Care at a Private Hospital in Gauteng, South Africa.
Introduction: Palliative care is a core component of comprehensive health care across a person's life span. South Africa is currently in the process of integrating palliative care into all levels of the health care system. Doctors play a vital role in providing these services, but misconception...
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Online Access: | http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33673 |
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-336732021-08-01T05:09:15Z An exploration of Doctor's perceptions and the provision of Palliative Care at a Private Hospital in Gauteng, South Africa. Booth, Elizabeth Cecile Ganca, Linda Palliative Medicine Introduction: Palliative care is a core component of comprehensive health care across a person's life span. South Africa is currently in the process of integrating palliative care into all levels of the health care system. Doctors play a vital role in providing these services, but misconceptions about palliative care and who should be providing it, may prevent these services from being offered. Aim: The aim of this study was to discover doctor's perceptions and the current provision of palliative care in a private hospital. Objectives: The objectives of the study were: (1) to explore doctors' experiences of pain and symptom management in palliative care; (2) to explore doctors' perceptions of palliative care, goals of care and teamwork in palliative care; and (3) to explore the doctors' provision of palliative care at the hospital. Methodology: This was a qualitative study using a grounded theory approach. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 14 participants, made up of doctors in oncology, physicians, surgeons, a cardiologist, an intensivist, a hematologist and a general practitioner. Interviews were recorded, transcribed and an inductive process was used for data analysis which allowed for categories to emerge from the data. Results: Eight themes emerged from the data analysis: improving the quality of life; palliative care as a role for oncologists; late referrals to palliative care, views on the World Health Organisation analgesic pain ladder; morphine a controversial means of pain control; team approach; family involvement and spiritual care. Conclusion: Palliative care was seen as an important intervention for a dying patient, but by introducing these services so late, patients are not benefitting from all that palliative care has to offer. Doctors did not always have a good understanding of when and how to provide palliative care. The following recommendations were made: (1) further research to be conducted in more private hospitals; (2)engage with management and doctors to begin the process of offering more formalised palliative care services at the hospital; (3) networking with available palliative care services, (4) organising palliative care training and workshops and (5) palliative care awareness campaigns. 2021-07-30T09:56:30Z 2021-07-30T09:56:30Z 2020_ 2021-07-29T12:27:55Z Master Thesis Masters MPhil http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33673 eng application/pdf Faculty of Health Sciences Department of Medicine |
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English |
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Dissertation |
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Palliative Medicine |
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Palliative Medicine Booth, Elizabeth Cecile An exploration of Doctor's perceptions and the provision of Palliative Care at a Private Hospital in Gauteng, South Africa. |
description |
Introduction: Palliative care is a core component of comprehensive health care across a person's life span. South Africa is currently in the process of integrating palliative care into all levels of the health care system. Doctors play a vital role in providing these services, but misconceptions about palliative care and who should be providing it, may prevent these services from being offered. Aim: The aim of this study was to discover doctor's perceptions and the current provision of palliative care in a private hospital. Objectives: The objectives of the study were: (1) to explore doctors' experiences of pain and symptom management in palliative care; (2) to explore doctors' perceptions of palliative care, goals of care and teamwork in palliative care; and (3) to explore the doctors' provision of palliative care at the hospital. Methodology: This was a qualitative study using a grounded theory approach. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 14 participants, made up of doctors in oncology, physicians, surgeons, a cardiologist, an intensivist, a hematologist and a general practitioner. Interviews were recorded, transcribed and an inductive process was used for data analysis which allowed for categories to emerge from the data. Results: Eight themes emerged from the data analysis: improving the quality of life; palliative care as a role for oncologists; late referrals to palliative care, views on the World Health Organisation analgesic pain ladder; morphine a controversial means of pain control; team approach; family involvement and spiritual care. Conclusion: Palliative care was seen as an important intervention for a dying patient, but by introducing these services so late, patients are not benefitting from all that palliative care has to offer. Doctors did not always have a good understanding of when and how to provide palliative care. The following recommendations were made: (1) further research to be conducted in more private hospitals; (2)engage with management and doctors to begin the process of offering more formalised palliative care services at the hospital; (3) networking with available palliative care services, (4) organising palliative care training and workshops and (5) palliative care awareness campaigns. |
author2 |
Ganca, Linda |
author_facet |
Ganca, Linda Booth, Elizabeth Cecile |
author |
Booth, Elizabeth Cecile |
author_sort |
Booth, Elizabeth Cecile |
title |
An exploration of Doctor's perceptions and the provision of Palliative Care at a Private Hospital in Gauteng, South Africa. |
title_short |
An exploration of Doctor's perceptions and the provision of Palliative Care at a Private Hospital in Gauteng, South Africa. |
title_full |
An exploration of Doctor's perceptions and the provision of Palliative Care at a Private Hospital in Gauteng, South Africa. |
title_fullStr |
An exploration of Doctor's perceptions and the provision of Palliative Care at a Private Hospital in Gauteng, South Africa. |
title_full_unstemmed |
An exploration of Doctor's perceptions and the provision of Palliative Care at a Private Hospital in Gauteng, South Africa. |
title_sort |
exploration of doctor's perceptions and the provision of palliative care at a private hospital in gauteng, south africa. |
publisher |
Faculty of Health Sciences |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11427/33673 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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