Abstract

When patients face advanced illness, their experience of care is especially important. In palliative care, we often rely on the accounts of bereaved relatives to report the quality of end-of-life care, and there are no validated patient-reported measures of the experience of care. We report therefore on a new questionnaire, Views on Care (VOC), to address this gap. It consists of four questions (see the following link for full questionnaire: www.pos-pal.org) selected/refined from St Christopher’s Index of Patient Priorities (SKIPP) 1 , which address patients’ evaluation of (1) change in their main concerns, (2) benefit from palliative services, (3) previous and (4) current quality of life (3 and 4 adapted from EORTC QLQ-C15-PAL – well-validated in advanced illness 2 ).
Methods
We conducted a survey to examine patients’ views on care (using VOC) and the relationship between these views and changes in health status. Participants were adults receiving specialist palliative care in eight hospital, hospice inpatient and community settings across England, recruited in 2014–2015. We collected demographic details (age, gender, ethnicity, marital status, if living alone, presence of informal caregiver, diagnosis, palliative phase of illness and performance status), plus patient-reported survey at baseline and follow-up (3–5 days later for inpatient and 7–21 days later for community settings) (see Table 1). The survey included VOC and the Integrated Palliative Care Outcome Scale (IPOS). We report VOC at follow-up and change in IPOS between baseline and follow-up. Descriptive statistics characterise sample demographics and VOC responses, and chi-square statistic tests the association between VOC scores and IPOS change scores. SPSS version 22 was used throughout. Ethical approval was obtained from the Dulwich National Research Ethics Committee, London, UK (reference no. 124991).
Demographic and clinical details of participants.
Results
A total of 212 participants were recruited; mean age was 65.84 (standard deviation (SD) = 13.5) years, mainly with cancer (79.5%). We report on 137 participants who completed both baseline and follow-up surveys (Figure 1). Responses to VOC 1, 3 and 4 were reasonably normally distributed. Responses to VOC 2 were positively skewed with most participants indicating that palliative care was giving positive benefit.

Distribution of VOC responses at follow-up (N = 137).
Participants reporting that ‘things had got better’ (VOC 1) were more likely to have improved overall outcomes (reduction in IPOS total score:
With regard to IPOS subscales, there was significant positive association between those reporting that ‘things had got better’ (VOC 1) and improved outcomes on the IPOS physical symptoms subscale (
Discussion
First, it is important to note that most participants reported that things were getting better and that palliative care was providing benefit. This was found across different settings and palliative Phases of Illness. Second, patients reported positive change more often when physical (rather than overall, psychological or communication/practical) outcomes had improved. Third, we found that reports of positive impact of the palliative care teams was associated with improvement in communication/practical outcomes, but not with improvement in outcomes overall. This is an important finding as it demonstrates how much communication and practical matters influence the experience of care. It also illustrates that both outcomes and experience need to be measured if quality of care is to be properly understood. In line with our findings, Black et al. 3 found that particular aspects of patient experience, namely, communication and trust in healthcare professionals, were strongly associated with better outcomes in surgery. A limitation of our findings is that – in this study–about one-third of patients did not complete the second timepoint, often due to a change in setting and loss to follow-up but sometimes because of deterioration in health.
This is the first study that has examined patients’ responses to the VOC questionnaire. Further research is needed to understand how VOC relates to more generic experience measures, how it behaves over time and to test its psychometric properties. However, VOC is brief and easy to use on a large scale with patients receiving palliative care across different settings. Its uniqueness is that it is brief and easy enough to use for ill patients receiving palliative care, in order to provide patient-level feedback in real time, rather than the institutional-level indicators that are often used to assess the quality of healthcare services. It adds very little burden to professionals, enabling patient feedback while taking up little time or effort. We hope it will be of value for clinical practice.
Footnotes
Declaration of conflicting interests
The author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship and/or publication of this article.
Funding
The author(s) disclosed receipt of the following financial support for the research, authorship and/or publication of this article: This study was funded by the National Institute for Health Research under the Programme Grants for Applied Research (project no. RP-PG-1210-12015). The views and opinions expressed by authors in this publication are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect those of the National Health Service, the National Institute of Health Research, Medical Research Council, Central Commissioning Facility, NIHR Evaluation, Trials and Studies Coordinating Centre, the National Institute of Health Research Programme Grants for Applied Research, or Department of Health and Social Care.
