Journal
JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT
Volume 45, Issue 5, Pages 912-925Publisher
ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2012.05.009
Keywords
Needs assessment; heart failure; NAT: PD-HF; palliative care
Funding
- Australian Government Department of Health and Ageing
- Cancer Council New South Wales
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Context. Understanding the types and extent of need is critical to informing needs-based care for people with chronic heart failure (CHF). Objectives. To explore the psychometric quality of a newly developed rapid screening measure to assess the supportive and palliative care needs of people with CHF. Methods. A convenience sample of multidisciplinary health professionals working in heart failure care was invited to comment, via an online survey and consultation, on suitability and required modifications to a validated cancer care needs assessment measure to inform the support and palliative care needs of patients with CHF and their caregivers. Psychometric testing was then undertaken with 52 patients with CHF recruited from a multidisciplinary heart failure service to explore inter-rater reliability and concurrent validity of the newly adapted Needs Assessment Tool: Progressive Disease-Heart Failure (NAT: PD-HF). Results. Health professionals (n = 21) rated the tool as easy to administer, comprehensive, and relevant for the CHF population. Prevalence-andbias-adjusted kappa values indicated good agreement between pairs of raters for each item in the NAT: PD-HF (range 0.54-0.90). Participants indicating a higher severity of concern in the NAT: PD-HF physical, daily living, and spiritual items reported significantly higher Heart Failure Needs Assessment Questionnaire physical and existential scores. Conclusion. This study provides preliminary evidence for the NAT: PD-HF as a potential strategy for identifying and informing the management of physical and psychosocial issues experienced by people with CHF. Further work is needed to examine additional psychometrics, benefits relating to unnecessary symptom burden, futile treatments, and admissions to hospital. (C) 2013 U.S. Cancer Pain Relief Committee. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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