Cultural or Spiritual End-of-Life Practice Preference Assessment and Documentation: Identifying Current Practice in Pediatric Hospice.

IF 1.2 4区 医学 Q3 NURSING Journal of Hospice & Palliative Nursing Pub Date : 2025-02-05 DOI:10.1097/NJH.0000000000001092
Kayla Combs, Robyn Stamm, Rachel Thienprayoon, Kimberly Ann Foster, Karen Behm, Laura Rozcicha
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Abstract

Communities use rituals at end of life to foster a peaceful death, ensure passage to the afterlife, and grieve their lost loved ones. Studies report fear of misunderstanding or impeding rituals as a barrier to accepting hospice care. However, there has been little research on cultural and spiritual rituals in the setting of hospice care or how patient preference should be assessed, documented, and supported by hospice staff. This project sought to identify the current practice for assessment of cultural or spiritual end-of-life practice preferences, and the documentation of those preferences, within pediatric hospice programs in a Midwestern state. In surveys of 2 pediatric hospice programs, employee respondents reported routine assessment (97.3%) and routine documentation (70.3%) of cultural or spiritual end-of-life practice preferences. Most respondents reported documentation was written by various disciplines and in various locations in the medical record. Additionally, a retrospective chart review was performed including decedents of 1 pediatric hospice program over a 5-year period. Documentation affirming familial spiritual beliefs was identified in 75.9% of charts, of which, only 12.2% had documentation regarding end-of-life-specific spiritual needs. Standardized documentation practices may help foster equitable hospice care for all patients by ensuring care providers are aware of the patient and/or family's end-of-life spiritual needs.

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生命末期文化或精神实践偏好评估与记录:确定儿科临终关怀的现行做法。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
11.10%
发文量
203
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Hospice & Palliative Nursing (JHPN) is the official journal of the Hospice & Palliative Nurses Association and is the professional, peer-reviewed journal for nurses in hospice and palliative care settings. Focusing on the clinical, educational and research aspects of care, JHPN offers current and reliable information on end of life nursing. Feature articles in areas such as symptom management, ethics, and futility of care address holistic care across the continuum. Book and article reviews, clinical updates and case studies create a journal that meets the didactic and practical needs of the nurse caring for patients with serious illnesses in advanced stages.
期刊最新文献
Charting New Paths: The Nurse Practitioner's Role in Leading Specialty-Aligned Palliative Care Consult Teams. The Intent of the Physician's Order for Life-Sustaining Treatment: Reflecting Patient Wishes and Institutional Obligations. Cultural or Spiritual End-of-Life Practice Preference Assessment and Documentation: Identifying Current Practice in Pediatric Hospice. Parents' Experiences of Palliative Care Decision Making for Children With Terminal Cancer: A Qualitative Study. Association News.
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