Issues for General Practitioners Caring for Dying Patients in the Home
Annette Street, Jeanine Blackford, Anne Turley and Judy Kelso
Australian Journal of Primary Health
5(2) 9 - 19
Published: 1999
Abstract
General practitioners have a central role in the provision of quality health care to the terminally ill patient and family in their own homes. Staff from the Department of Human Services were concerned that GPs were experiencing stress through their increasing role in the provision of palliative care and that there was a need for a fee-for-service stress counselling program for them. A small qualitative study was conducted to verify this perceived need. Semi-structured telephone interviews were conducted with 50 GPs selected from a sample of metropolitan attendees at postgraduate educational activities or doctors known to palliative care services. GPs faced a number of issues in their care for terminally ill people in the community but a fee-for-service counselling program was deemed unnecessary. Evidence from the study confirmed that effective communication strategies between GPs, palliative care services and acute hospitals, an interdisciplinary team approach, and improved understanding between health professionals would enhance the quality of care for dying people and their caregivers.https://doi.org/10.1071/PY99015
© La Trobe University 1999