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DOI: 10.1111/1468-0009.12373
¤ OpenAccess: Hybrid
This work has “Hybrid” OA status. This means it is free under an open license in a toll-access journal.

Service Delivery Models to Maximize Quality of Life for Older People at the End of Life: A Rapid Review

Catherine Evans,Lucy Ison,Clare Ellis‐Smith,Caroline Nicholson,Alessia Costa,Adejoke Oluyase,Eve Namisango,Anna E Bone,Lisa Jane Brighton,Deokhee Yi,Sarah Combes,Sabrina Bajwah,Wei Gao,Richard Harding,Paul M. Ong,Irene J Higginson,Matthew Maddocks

CINAHL
Palliative care
Quality of life (healthcare)
2019
Policy Points We identified two overarching classifications of integrated geriatric and palliative care to maximize older people's quality of life at the end of life. Both are oriented to person‐centered care, but with differing emphasis on either function or symptoms and concerns. Policymakers should both improve access to palliative care beyond just the last months of life and increase geriatric care provision to maintain and optimize function. This would ensure that continuity and coordination for potentially complex care needs across the continuum of late life would be maintained, where the demarcation of boundaries between healthy aging and healthy dying become increasingly blurred. Our findings highlight the urgent need for health system change to improve end‐of‐life care as part of universal health coverage. The use of health services should be informed by the likelihood of benefits and intended outcomes rather than on prognosis. Context In an era of unprecedented global aging, a key priority is to align health and social services for older populations in order to support the dual priorities of living well while adapting to a gradual decline in function. We aimed to provide a comprehensive synthesis of evidence regarding service delivery models that optimize the quality of life (QoL) for older people at the end of life across health, social, and welfare services worldwide. Methods We conducted a rapid scoping review of systematic reviews. We searched MEDLINE, CINAHL, EMBASE, and CDSR databases from 2000 to 2017 for reviews reporting the effectiveness of service models aimed at optimizing QoL for older people, more than 50% of whom were older than 60 and in the last one or two years of life. We assessed the quality of these included reviews using AMSTAR and synthesized the findings narratively. Results Of the 2,238 reviews identified, we included 72, with 20 reporting meta‐analysis. Although all the World Health Organization (WHO) regions were represented, most of the reviews reported data from the Americas (52 of 72), Europe (46 of 72), and/or the Western Pacific (28 of 72). We identified two overarching classifications of service models but with different target outcomes: Integrated Geriatric Care, emphasizing physical function, and Integrated Palliative Care, focusing mainly on symptoms and concerns. Areas of synergy across the overarching classifications included person‐centered care, education, and a multiprofessional workforce. The reviews assessed 117 separate outcomes. A meta‐analysis demonstrated effectiveness for both classifications on QoL, including symptoms such as pain, depression, and psychological well‐being. Economic analysis and its implications were poorly considered. Conclusions Despite their different target outcomes, those service models classified as Integrated Geriatric Care or Integrated Palliative Care were effective in improving QoL for older people nearing the end of life. Both approaches highlight the imperative for integrating services across the care continuum, with service involvement triggered by the patient's needs and likelihood of benefits. To inform the sustainability of health system change we encourage economic analyses that span health and social care and examine all sources of finance to understand contextual inequalities.
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    Service Delivery Models to Maximize Quality of Life for Older People at the End of Life: A Rapid Review” is a paper by Catherine Evans Lucy Ison Clare Ellis‐Smith Caroline Nicholson Alessia Costa Adejoke Oluyase Eve Namisango Anna E Bone Lisa Jane Brighton Deokhee Yi Sarah Combes Sabrina Bajwah Wei Gao Richard Harding Paul M. Ong Irene J Higginson Matthew Maddocks published in 2019. It has an Open Access status of “hybrid”. You can read and download a PDF Full Text of this paper here.