Adaptation of the Ambulatory and Home Care Record for collecting palliative care service utilisation data from family carers in the UK: a pilot study

Abstract Background Measuring service use and costs is an important aspect of service delivery evaluation. In end-of-life care, there is heavy reliance on care by family/friends (informal carers) and this should be reflected in the total cost of care alongside formal services. The Ambulatory and Hom...

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Main Authors: Laura M. Holdsworth, Heather Gage, Peter Williams, Claire Butler
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-08-01
Series:Pilot and Feasibility Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40814-018-0332-2
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spelling doaj-6b8bdae7ef46439dbc444a114b63b7f62020-11-25T02:14:19ZengBMCPilot and Feasibility Studies2055-57842018-08-014111010.1186/s40814-018-0332-2Adaptation of the Ambulatory and Home Care Record for collecting palliative care service utilisation data from family carers in the UK: a pilot studyLaura M. Holdsworth0Heather Gage1Peter Williams2Claire Butler3Primary Care and Population Health, Stanford University School of MedicineSurrey Health Economics Centre, Department of Clinical and Experimental Medicine, University of SurreyDepartment of Mathematics, Faculty of Engineering and Physical Sciences, University of SurreyCentre for Health Services Studies, University of KentAbstract Background Measuring service use and costs is an important aspect of service delivery evaluation. In end-of-life care, there is heavy reliance on care by family/friends (informal carers) and this should be reflected in the total cost of care alongside formal services. The Ambulatory and Home Care Record, developed in Canada, is both comprehensive in coverage and validated for collecting data on formal and informal caring. This study aimed to adapt and pilot the Ambulatory and Home Care Record questionnaire for use in the UK within a study evaluating a new palliative care service. The objectives were to test if family carers could be recruited and assess acceptability and usability of data gathered. Methods Single cohort pilot study using a structured telephone questionnaire carried out every other week. Family carers of patients newly added to the palliative care register or referred to hospice services in the South East of England were invited to participate by mail. Volunteers remained in the study for a maximum of six interviews or until the patient died. Results In total, 194 carers were invited by mail to participate in the study, of which 23 (11.8%) completed at least one interview and 16 (8.2%) completed all possible interviews. Recruitment to the study was lower than anticipated, but most participants seemed to find the interviews acceptable. The modified questionnaire produced usable and relevant data for an economic evaluation of formal and informal caring costs. Conclusions Modifications are needed to the process of recruitment as a postal recruitment strategy did not have a high response rate. The Ambulatory and Home Care Record has proved a viable tool for use in the UK setting, with a few minor modifications, and will be used in a larger study comparing hospice models.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40814-018-0332-2Service utilisationPalliative careQuestionnaireTelephone interviewPilot studyInformal care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Laura M. Holdsworth
Heather Gage
Peter Williams
Claire Butler
spellingShingle Laura M. Holdsworth
Heather Gage
Peter Williams
Claire Butler
Adaptation of the Ambulatory and Home Care Record for collecting palliative care service utilisation data from family carers in the UK: a pilot study
Pilot and Feasibility Studies
Service utilisation
Palliative care
Questionnaire
Telephone interview
Pilot study
Informal care
author_facet Laura M. Holdsworth
Heather Gage
Peter Williams
Claire Butler
author_sort Laura M. Holdsworth
title Adaptation of the Ambulatory and Home Care Record for collecting palliative care service utilisation data from family carers in the UK: a pilot study
title_short Adaptation of the Ambulatory and Home Care Record for collecting palliative care service utilisation data from family carers in the UK: a pilot study
title_full Adaptation of the Ambulatory and Home Care Record for collecting palliative care service utilisation data from family carers in the UK: a pilot study
title_fullStr Adaptation of the Ambulatory and Home Care Record for collecting palliative care service utilisation data from family carers in the UK: a pilot study
title_full_unstemmed Adaptation of the Ambulatory and Home Care Record for collecting palliative care service utilisation data from family carers in the UK: a pilot study
title_sort adaptation of the ambulatory and home care record for collecting palliative care service utilisation data from family carers in the uk: a pilot study
publisher BMC
series Pilot and Feasibility Studies
issn 2055-5784
publishDate 2018-08-01
description Abstract Background Measuring service use and costs is an important aspect of service delivery evaluation. In end-of-life care, there is heavy reliance on care by family/friends (informal carers) and this should be reflected in the total cost of care alongside formal services. The Ambulatory and Home Care Record, developed in Canada, is both comprehensive in coverage and validated for collecting data on formal and informal caring. This study aimed to adapt and pilot the Ambulatory and Home Care Record questionnaire for use in the UK within a study evaluating a new palliative care service. The objectives were to test if family carers could be recruited and assess acceptability and usability of data gathered. Methods Single cohort pilot study using a structured telephone questionnaire carried out every other week. Family carers of patients newly added to the palliative care register or referred to hospice services in the South East of England were invited to participate by mail. Volunteers remained in the study for a maximum of six interviews or until the patient died. Results In total, 194 carers were invited by mail to participate in the study, of which 23 (11.8%) completed at least one interview and 16 (8.2%) completed all possible interviews. Recruitment to the study was lower than anticipated, but most participants seemed to find the interviews acceptable. The modified questionnaire produced usable and relevant data for an economic evaluation of formal and informal caring costs. Conclusions Modifications are needed to the process of recruitment as a postal recruitment strategy did not have a high response rate. The Ambulatory and Home Care Record has proved a viable tool for use in the UK setting, with a few minor modifications, and will be used in a larger study comparing hospice models.
topic Service utilisation
Palliative care
Questionnaire
Telephone interview
Pilot study
Informal care
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40814-018-0332-2
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