Need satisfaction in terminal care settings.

Research comparing hospice and conventional programs of care for the terminally ill has identified few measurable differences in the care provided to patients and their families. Nonetheless, hospice recipients frequently express a higher level of satisfaction with their program of care. This study compared the ability of hospice and conventional care settings to meet the basic emotional needs of families during a member's dying and death from cancer. In addition, the relationship of basic needs satisfaction, perceptions about the nurse, and overall satisfaction with the program of care were explored. One hundred bereaved familial care givers completed a mail questionnaire concerning their perceptions of care at the site of a family member's death. The sites were (1) the home, with care provided by a Medicare certified, community-based hospice program: (2) a hospital affiliated with a Medicare certified, community-based hospice program; (3) a hospital with its own hospice program; and (4) a conventional (non-hospice) hospital. Analyses of quantitative data supported two hypotheses about significant differences between hospice and conventional care. The conventional care group demonstrated the lowest levels of basic needs satisfaction, satisfaction with the psycho-social support of the nurse, and overall program satisfaction. As predicted, overall satisfaction with care was consistent across hospice groups. However, home hospice care provided the highest quality of basic needs satisfaction and the highest level of satisfaction with the nurse. Significant Pearson correlations supported the hypothesis that overall satisfaction is negatively related to unmet basic needs (r = -0.69) and positively related to the psycho-social support received from nurses (r = 0.73).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)

[1]  J. J. Kennedy An introduction to the design and analysis of experiments in education and psychology , 1977 .

[2]  M J Krant,et al.  The Impact of Hospice Care on Families , 1984, International journal of psychiatry in medicine.

[3]  N. Risser Development of an Instrument to Measure Patient Satisfaction with Nurses and Nursing Care in Primary Care Settings , 1975, Nursing research.

[4]  Stephen K. C. Woo The Psychiatric and Neuropsychiatric Aspects of HIV Disease , 1988, Journal of palliative care.

[5]  Arleen Leibowitz,et al.  A RANDOMISED CONTROLLED TRIAL OF HOSPICE CARE , 1984, The Lancet.

[6]  E. Kübler-Ross,et al.  On death and dying. , 1972, JAMA.

[7]  R. Miléo,et al.  Cost of terminal care: home hospice vs hospital. , 1979, Nursing Outlook.

[8]  J. Morris,et al.  An alternative in terminal care: results of the National Hospice Study. , 1986, Journal of chronic diseases.

[9]  C. M. Parkes,et al.  'Hospice' versus 'hospital' care--re-evaluation after 10 years as seen by surviving spouses. , 1984, Postgraduate medical journal.

[10]  S. Hampe Needs of the Grieving Spouse in a Hospital Setting , 1975, Kango kenkyu. The Japanese journal of nursing research.

[11]  C. M. Parkes Terminal care: evaluation of in-patient service at St Christopher's Hospice. Part I. Views of surviving spouse on effects of the service on the patient. , 1979, Postgraduate medical journal.

[12]  J Rogers,et al.  The final illness in cancer: the widow's perspective. , 1977, Canadian Medical Association journal.

[13]  C. M. Parkes,et al.  Terminal care: evaluation of effects on surviving family of care before and after bereavement. , 1983, Postgraduate medical journal.

[14]  K. Charmaz The Social Reality of Death: Death in Contemporary America , 1980 .

[15]  M. Haid,et al.  People and Dollars: The Experience of One Hospice , 1984, Southern medical journal.