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1 Supportive Care Framework Project Literature Review Summary Supportive Care Standards Introduction CCN has undertaken a literature review to inform the development of supportive care standards in NZ – see Appendix A for methodology information. It is advisable to read the paper on the Models of Care first. This summary document has been developed to support decision making for this workshop with respect to what areas of supportive care we need to develop standards for and how do we want those standards to look. This document contains an overview table of the main contributors to standards nationally and internationally and more detailed analysis of each. See Appendix B for links to model and standards documents reviewed. What are Standards? The Ministry describes standards as “………standards describe the level of service that a person with cancer should have access to in New Zealand. They are used by the DHBs as the benchmarks for high quality care for different types of cancer and help ensure patients receive timely, good quality care along the cancer pathway.” http://www.health.govt.nz/our-work/diseases-and-conditions/cancer-programme/faster-cancertreatment-programme/national-tumour-standards Why do we need supportive care standards? One of the major impediments to the furthering of the area of Supportive Care is the ability to measure the quality, access and impact of services. How the impacts of interventions are measured is not always a quantitative science but in order for organisations to be held accountable for providing quality services we need to be able to monitor. Measurement also allows us to identify gaps, issues with engagement and to refine our work. Standards need to inform the workforce so they can be clear what is expected of them is and how this fits within the systems they work in Inequities are the presence of systematic disparities in health between groups and are where we can achieve best health gains. Standardised health care delivers best health gains ( Scott, Nina, 2010) and as such equity needs to be considered within each standard developed to ensure they contribute to Maori health gains and reducing inequalities for groups experiencing them. 2 What does the literature on Supportive Care Standards tell us? The following general observations on the development, structure and implementation of standards have been generated from the review of the literature: Standards have been developed to support the implementation of a supportive care model or policy Standards perform at various levels - patient, practitioner, service, organization, system Some standards have developed along a workforce competency framework rather than at an organisational level A generalised supportive care standard was the most common standard described in the literature. Some countries have undertaken further work to describe standards relating to specific aspects of supportive care in particular on workforce, palliative care and psychosocial screening Work has been undertaken by several organisations to incorporate the principles behind person centred care within standards but often it is a statement that organisations will work to provide person centred care. There is mixed consumer involvement in standards development at times standards have been developed from a more research academic basis. In more recent work the voice of the consumer is more evident. Most standards have a set of principles behind them with common themes around the need to identify and respond to distress. The importance of family/whanau and supporting the support network is evident in more areas. The importance of spirituality and a sense of holistic is care is in most literature around supportive care. The international work hasn’t had a large focus on the needs of particular indigenous or ethnic groups although at times they reference the needs based on socio economic status. Any work in the NZ context has been more explicit about equity responses and the need to improve Maori Health gains. As supportive care services are provided by both government and non-government organisations the scope and application of standards need to be understood by all contributors. Most standards make reference to, if not incorporate within them, the role of the NGO. In the work wider to the NICE guidance this is more evident with joint work with agencies such as Macmillan. Monitoring requirements were not easily identified for most of the standards Standards give a clear focus to the level of education / training the workforce needs to provide quality care to the people they serve.. With respect to complementary and alternative standards were around practitioners being able to engage in conversations about these complimentary treatments in particular in a non judgemental way rather than the treatments themselves. There is new work being undertaken around guidance for mainstream health practitioners from the Ministry of Health re Tikanga a-Rongoa re standards. 3 What does the Literature indicate as aspects Standards for Supportive Care? In the Overview Table (page 5) it is clear that there are some very common aspects of supportive care for which standards have been developed, including: Communication (Skills and needs of workforce and organisations, including breaking bad news) Care Coordination often talked about in coordinate of someone’s supportive care and medical care needs occurring concurrently Psychological both in terms of specialist psychological support and as a way of group distress and other coping techniques Social in terms of both the aspects of the impact of other socio economic factors but also from a organisation of additional responsibilities point of view Spiritual and a move towards ensuring health professionals have the skills to support these conversations. Survivorship begins often in early documents as rehabilitation moving on to the wider understanding of survivorship with some interesting work on Interdisciplinary involvement in promoting return to work. Palliative care as a distinct service, including appropriate and timely referrals. Information from a communication perspective but also from a self management/informed consent perspective. Not all but many also include support for the family in particular children of patients, and grief support Some look at alternative and complimentary medicine Screening for distress has a large body of work to support its implementation Workforce specific competencies - breaking down the skills needed for those responding to different level of need. One of the gaps is that standards don’t refer to the physical space very often which is important both from a privacy and engagement point of view. Many make reference also to cultural competency but not always to what this may mean in most cases because of this work occurring separately. So how do we do this? The vision for this project is ‘People with cancer and their carers experience an integrated and coordinated system of continued supportive care, overseen by an educated workforce, to ease the social consequences arising from their experience with cancer and to enhance their quality of life.’ The decision making for this workshop is what are the areas of supportive care we need to develop standards for and how do we want those standards to look. As you review the information in this summary document please consider the following questions: What aspects of supportive care should have standards in NZ? 4 Where do we target the standards ie at the quality of the services received by the person affected by cancer, at the health care worker delivering the services, at the organisation contracted to deliver the services or at a broader policy level? What does international and national experience tells us is required to support the implementation of standards? 5 Key Yes Overview Table Origin NZ - HOI Rubrics No NZ –Tumour Standards Evidence of equity focus or potential but limited to contribute to Maori Health gain Aspects of Supportive Care included in standards: Communication Yes with comment Canada - Ontario Canada - CAPO as separate but limited Psychological Social some streams Spiritual Ref not specific Survivorship Referred to in other areas rather than standard additional standards Specific separate standards Information Other Format of standards: Organisational goal Rationale Good practice points Alternative and Complementar y In other documents Limited Input into the development: Consumer More DHB NGO based Unclear Australia Victoria Additional work Workforce Workforce[inclu ding workforce self-care} Alternative and Complimentary Family specific. research justified research Limited dependent on stream. workforce education and implementation responsibilities workforce competency based New work since development As part of other aspects Screening tools/workforce in terms of psychology America Limited Separate work. most streams UK - NICE but limited Care Coordination Palliative Comment Workforce Screening Screening High level generic statements. inclusive of in terms of liaison with 6 NZ Context National Supportive Care Implementation Plan (HOI, 2011) Health Outcomes International (HOI) was contracted by the Ministry to develop a national implementation plan for the supportive care guidance. Recommendations included in the plan which relate to the development of standards include: At the service, regional and national levels develop minimum data set to inform service contracting & funding decisions in relation to psychosocial services. Nationally articulate funding responsibilities for psychosocial supportive care across DHB boundaries {i.e. should the tertiary centre fund care or should it be up to each DHB. Nationally ensure referral processes for providing psychosocial support are included as part of service specifications. Nationally and regionally, develop minimum data set to identify need for different levels of psychosocial support and ensure that there are appropriate staffing levels {FTE} to meet per capita need. Nationally and regionally specify the specialist FTE required to deliver psychosocial support as part of integrated cancer care. All levels collect and analyse data on the efficacy/effectiveness of psychosocial support services on improving patient outcomes e.g. reducing unmet supportive care needs, lowering distress}, while conducting evaluations of service processed. Nationally, ensure that systems for monitoring and tracking psychosocial support data {e.g. service utilization, patient distress data} are built into service agreements. Assess patients’ practical barriers to accessing psychosocial supports and ensure appropriate referrals to care coordinators and/or social workers. In addition to developing the national plan, HOI worked with the Expert Advisory Group to develop draft rubrics for each aspect of supportive care. A rubric is a way of articulating the expectations of a service by listing the criteria, or what counts, and describing levels of quality from excellent to poor – see social support example below. Equity was a key principle guiding the development of the rubrics and there is a separate section describing equity and Māori health gain expectations across all aspects of supportive care. The rubrics provide detail around what quality could look like and may be useful from a monitoring perspective ie to support organisations to review their services against any standards. 7 S OCIAL S UPPORT Rating Excellent and equitable coverage, access & quality Very good and equitable coverage, access & quality Good and equitable coverage, access & quality Adequate and equitable coverage, access & quality Descriptor All of the features listed under ‘Very Good’ and in addition, all of the following: An integrated and coordinated system of continued social support provides timely, accessible (with assistance with access where appropriate) support that fully meet the needs of the full range of patient and family/whānau populations An outreach model of care – proactive identification of cancer patients and their families/whānau in the community whose needs could be met by support services An ‘addressing inequalities’ focus drives social support policy, strategic planning, development, monitoring and evaluation; those who experience the inequalities are involved at all levels New and innovative models of social support are being researched, developed, piloted and systematically evaluated in the region The services in the region exhibit ALL of the following: Social support and wider needs of patients, carers and whānau are systematically, routinely and proactively assessed and addressed using a holistic assessment model Information on social support is available to enable patients to self manage their needs Multiple types of high quality emotional, social and economic support are offered in multiple settings (at home, respite care, etc) Social support services (government and non-government) are recognised as core members of the MDT There is a highly stable, well-qualified workforce of experienced professionals delivering support services in culturally appropriate ways and using highly effective interpersonal communication The service design and implementation clearly reflect the relevant guiding principles and best practices, including consumer and family/whānau involvement, service responsiveness to Māori and Pacific peoples, whānau ora, reducing inequalities in access and outcomes Services are generally proactive about anticipating and planning for future needs Services are effectively promoted and communicated to diverse target populations within the community Services have systematic evaluation in place that they use to continuously improve the quality of and access to their services and address inequalities; R&D may lead to innovations for extending or redesigning services The services in the region exhibit all of the minimal requirements listed under Adequate, any of the higher quality criteria listed under Very Good, and: Appropriate linkages exist between service providers and key professional bodies, universities and others ALL of the following minimal requirements are met: Social support and wider needs of patients, carers and whānau are assessed and addressed using a holistic assessment model which is mostly up to date, 8 but may be somewhat reactive or unsystematic There is some success in integrating and coordinating different kinds of services, but there is still room for improvement The system of continued social support is sufficiently timely and accessible that it meets the important needs of the vast majority of patient and family/whānau populations An adequate range (to meet the population’s most prevalent needs) of acceptable quality emotional, social and economic support is offered in multiple settings (at home, respite care, etc) There is a reasonably stable, sufficiently qualified and experienced workforce of professionals conducting assessments and delivering support services The service design and delivery generally reflects the relevant guiding principles – including consumer involvement, service responsiveness to Māori and Pacific, whānau ora, reducing inequalities in access and outcomes – with no serious exceptions Services have basic monitoring systems in place and use these to improve the quality of and access to their services and address inequalities Services are adequately promoted and communicated to target populations within the community Regional directories of social support services exist None of the major gaps or quality problems listed under ‘Poor’, but there is evidence of one or more of the following inadequacies: Inadequate equity, coverage, access &/or quality Poor equity, coverage, access &/or quality Some efforts are being made to address inequities in access to quality social support services, but may not be well designed or implemented, so that only very minimal or no improvements are evident in equity of access Support services for key population groups within the community are inadequate Any one or more of the following major gaps or quality problems is evident: Numerous and ongoing serious problems with accessing the services are evident (e.g. significant numbers of those in most need are not accessing services; waiting times for services are highly problematic for patients and/or families) Significant gaps exist in the provision of support services that meet the needs and access challenges of specific population groups Inequalities in access to quality services are extremely serious or increasing over time or inadequate efforts are being made to address inequalities in access to quality services, and so the inequalities are therefore perpetuated in the system Individual support needs are not understood sufficiently to be able to appropriately design or evaluate services offered An unstable workforce (high staff turnover) or inadequately trained staff 9 National Tumour Standards (MOH 2013) In 2013 the Cancer Society NZ and PONZ collaborated on draft psychosocial standards which were provided to the national tumour standards groups to inform the National Provisional Tumour Standards which were published in 2013 for the following cancers: Bowel Breast Gynaecological Head and Neck Lung (2011) Melanoma Myeloma Sarcoma Lymphoma Thyroid Upper Gastro-intestinal All tumour standard documents contain a cluster(s) relating to psychosocial care and /or care coordination. The following two standards are included in all 2013 tumour standards: All patients with ……………… and their family/whānau have equitable and coordinated access to appropriate medical, allied health and supportive care services, in accordance with Guidance for Improving Supportive Care for Adults with Cancer in New Zealand (Ministry of Health 2010). Patients with ……………cancer have access to a…………….. cancer clinical nurse specialist or other health professional who is a member of the MDM to help coordinate all aspects of their care. Some documents also contain additional relevant standards, for example: All patients with a confirmed diagnosis of lymphoma have access to ongoing psychosocial services (Lymphoma) Patients are provided with verbal and written information and general practitioners (GPs) with written information about bowel cancer, diagnostic procedures, treatment options (including effectiveness and risks), final treatment plans and support services. (Bowel) Women with breast cancer are screened with a validated tool to identify psychological and social needs at key points of their breast cancer experience. (Breast) Women or their family/whānau found to be experiencing significant psychological distress or facing particularly difficult treatment decisions are offered prompt referral to a specialist psychological service, as part of an integrated cancer service. (Breast) Formal (validated) psychosocial assessments are undertaken at key points of women’s cancer journeys. (Gynaecological) Patients are taught self-examination. (Melanoma) Patients who have had a limb amputated to treat their sarcoma are offered rapid and easy access to prosthetic services, and a prosthesis that suits their needs. (Sarcoma) Patients have access to appropriate rehabilitation services, including physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and chronic pain and lymphoedema specialist services. (Sarcoma) 10 There are monitoring requirements attached to many of these standards however, as reported by HOI in 2011 and more recently experienced by networks and DHBs undertaking service reviews against the standards, data relating to supportive care activity and outcomes are very difficult to define, capture and analyse. Midland Cancer Network is currently undertaking a regional service review against the supportive care standards across all the tumour standards. Information from this project will guide the further development of supportive care standards in NZ. General observations from the analysis of the national tumour standards include: Each tumour standard was developed by a working party and for most, supportive care professionals, NGOs and consumers were involved Overall there is limited reference to the role of supportive care services, the workforce that provides this and the value that NGO services bring. The standards have limited detail describing the different aspects of supportive care, the populations that would most benefit from supportive care services, the role of supportive care services, the workforce that provides this, the tools and resources to be used and the value that NGO services bring As noted the monitoring requirements are not well defined and readily captured. The standards are not described in a way that guide the workforce as to what services they need to ensure their cancer patient is getting and how can they ensure that person is getting the supportive care they need. With supportive care being less defined in some tumour streams there is a danger of this disparity being replicated in what services some tumour patients may receive. 11 Canadian Context Ontario Approach This group took the American work and adapted and added to it for their purposes as indicated in the model work. Their work was then critiqued by independent review in terms of its content utilising groups of clinical and research staff to evaluate work from a wide spectrum including Palliative and Primary Care. These standards follow a domain or aspect of supportive care with recommendations for actions or workplace competencies to support this. There are standards which are more specific to workforce and others to services. Some of these standards have then been further developed into more expansive and explicit standards as separate pieces of work. Example Standard Systematically Monitoring, Evaluating, and Readjusting Plans 18) Health care professionals should systematically follow up on the uptake of services by patients, as well as any problems encountered, and patient satisfaction with care. Domain C. Health Care Providers All cancer care providers, including oncologists, palliative care physicians, family physicians, psychiatrists, psychologists, social workers, nurses, dieticians, occupational therapists, physiotherapists, speech language pathologists, spiritual care practitioners, health care administrators, volunteers, community organizations, and other health care providers, have a responsibility to ensure that cancer patients and their families receive the psychosocial standard of care. Recommendations 19) All cancer care providers should participate in education and training programs to increase their awareness of the significance of psychosocial care and enhance their skills in the assessment and management of psychosocial issues. 20) Communication and patient education are expectations of clinical care. All health care providers should seek training in these areas 21) Health care providers should maintain a directory of resources available to patients and their families at no cost. Critical Analysis The voice of the consumer is not clearly evident, and while patient centred care is referred to this isn’t always reflected in the language of the document. The needs of the indigenous population are not evident or their needs appear to be seen as a separate process (Cancer Strategy Ontario Cancer Care 2013) with little connection back to mainstream documents. This would not be an approach that would work towards improving health outcomes for Maori. 12 The work from this area is well supported by research and rationale is provided for each point. Because of the vigorous way it is reviewed it at times can be confusing to read. It aims to try to achieve person and family/whanau centred care. It gives service as well as workforce recommendations, including some NGO. The authors of the work have acknowledged that while this work provided a robust base its implementation has remained inconsistent. (Li 2012) The additional domains added from the American Model make it a wider Supportive Care Model as opposed to a more psychosocial model and it is a move towards meeting wider needs. Its promotion of the use of clinical supervision to help with the wellbeing of staff is a sign of a group in touch with the needs of the workforce. It would provide a base to look at what aspects need to be considered but would need wider expansion to make it more valuable for implementation. What has arisen from this work similar to the other standards development is further work around specific areas for example Palliative and Survivorship Care. Survivorship care is a less developed area in these standards as was found with many of the others too. Potential to include it in an overarching standard but also seek to do additional work in developing more specific standards. Canadian Association of Psychosocial Oncology (CAPO) Approach CAPO reviewed its Standards in 2010 and wanted to move into a more person centered care set of Standards. They felt this was the right move away from more systems orientated methods and focus. They acknowledge very clearly a struggle with definition between psychosocial care and supportive care terminology. The standards cover off a wide range of aspects including key principles to care, what levels of care are needed and who provides that care. A rationale is provided for each aspect. 13 Example Standards Standard of Care V: Survivorship Individuals with cancer have the right to psychosocial and supportive care that includes availability of professionals to meet needs related to the late- and long-term psychosocial effects of cancer treatment. They are offered a survivorship care plan that summarizes the treatment received to date, follow-up appointment frequency schedule with oncology and primary care, a checklist of relevant late effects of treatment, and a psychosocial resource guide. Rationale Cancer survivors report ongoing difficulties in recovery and returning to ‘normal’ following treatment for this life-altering experience. Survivors of cancer, although hearing that they are ‘free of cancer’, may still experience fears of recurrence, and may have long-standing issues, such as depression, anxiety, and impairment of cognition (Ganz, 2000; Hewitt et al., 2005). Body image, sexual alterations, and long term functional changes are common, as are relationship and other social role difficulties, return to work concerns, financial challenges, among others (Hewitt et al.) Cancer survivors commonly face these psychosocial concerns and worries (Rowland, 2008), as do their family members (Golant & Haskins, 2008). Critical Analysis Consumers were involved in the review This was a concentrated effort to look at more person centred care and standards The standards do however attempt to cover a lot in one statement. They acknowledge the importance of the NGO sector how admit they struggled to articulate this within the standards. Language and terminology is an acknowledged difficulty They have looked very closely at the requirements for staff education and what supportive care is needed at different levels of facility, which provides a helpful tool when planning staff education. As with other Canadian work the focus is not evident in mainstream documents around improving the outcomes for their indigenous populations or high need groups.. 14 UK Context NICE Approach Nice takes an approach which gives its recommendations and breaks them down to the various levels of implementation in the UK context: – national governments – commissioners – Cancer Networks – provider organisations – multidisciplinary teams/services – individual health and social care professionals – Workforce Development Confederations/the Workforce Development Steering Group in Wales It covers each area as outlined in the Model and provides a set of recommendations. For the sake of space this example is edited - each area has outlined within it the current state, what the problem is, what the research is saying and then it outlines the levels of standards required to be maintained and improved. Example Standards 7. Spiritual Support Services A. Introduction 7.2 These questions re-emerge at various points in the patient pathway, but tend to be more focused when: – new symptoms appear – side-effects of treatment become distressing – patients must adapt to changes in their lives which have emotional and social consequences – changes occur in relationships with key people. 7.9 There are indications that spiritual needs are not being met within cancer services. For instance: – patients have insufficient choice in people to whom they can turn for spiritual care, and may be unaware of choices available to them – health and social care staff have insufficient awareness of how to access individuals who can provide spiritual care – health and social care staff may be reluctant to call for chaplains’ services or may not detect the need for spiritual support at key stages of the patient pathway; some may feel awkward and vulnerable when broaching spiritual issues with patients – within the hospital sector, there are insufficient numbers of chaplains to meet needs, as they are responsible for supporting all patients, not just those receiving cancer treatment or palliative care 15 B. Objectives 7.10 The objectives are to ensure that: – patients and carers receive support, if sought, to make sense of difficult life events through an exploration of spiritual and existential issues, including an effort to foster hope and promote well-being within an integrated care approach – health and social care professionals are able to acknowledge spiritual issues among patients and carers and to respond in a flexible, non-judgemental and non-imposing way C. Recommendations C.2 Service configuration and delivery: specific recommendations – 7.15 Providers and teams should ensure patients and carers are offered information about the resources available for spiritual care within a particular organisation or community, as well as information on how to access spiritual help and support. – 7.19 Commissioners should ensure that multidisciplinary teams have access to suitably qualified, authorised and appointed spiritual caregivers, capable of offering spiritual care in an open and flexible way and who can act as a resource for patients, carers and staff. Representation may not be needed within every team, but all teams should be able to access people with a spectrum of skills and an agreed level of competence to support spiritual care. C.3 Workforce development: specific recommendations – 7.24 Skilled, sensitive and appropriate spiritual care can be provided by a variety of people, including volunteers, family members, health and social care staff and faith groups. It is essential that health and social care staff have the necessary skills, knowledge and support to deliver sensitive care. C.4 Research and development: specific recommendations – 7.27 Research is needed to promote understanding of how spiritual needs and sources of support of different patient groups evolve over time and how spiritual concerns are best assessed and measured. D. Evidence – 7.29 There appears to be growing interest in the relationship between spiritual support and health, but relatively little research has been carried out in this area. Some has centred on the nature of provision of spiritual support for patients. Hospitals and hospices appear to be changing the nature of their arrangements for spiritual support in line with changes in the religious beliefs of the wider population. There is an increasing use of multi-faith/quiet rooms as spiritual focal points in preference to traditional chapels, and expansion of the role of chaplains/spiritual care givers from one that is purely religious [B]. There is also interest in developing provision for spiritual support within the care home sector [B]. 16 Critical Analysis This work was undertaken with the input of consumers and clinicians. It looks at whole system through to workforce needs and also includes NGO input. This guidance looks at access issues for those from a lower socio economic group more than those from a cultural base and the impact on care. This has some relevancy to the NZ context; however it doesn’t provide guidance on how to improve health equity for a population. Many of the statements from this guidance have informed standards work internationally. The language used is understandable and less academic than the Ontario model for example. However they are very big and can be overwhelming from a consumer and practitioner perspective. The statements are explicit enough to be measurable but generic enough to be applicable in many cases to a wide variety of settings. The standards are broken down to different levels of responsibility from funding managers to frontline staff. They give guidance to the skills needed for the workforce to deliver effective care. The document feels more person centred and family/whānau friendly, with specific standards for this area. Such extensive standards for aspects such as family and spirituality do give it some validity for our purposes. 17 Australian Context Victoria Approach Victoria’s approach to standards for supportive care has been to develop competencies for the workforce. It outlines in detail what is needed for health professionals to provide care across different aspects of supportive care. This work is supported by an education program and resources dedicated to each topic. It also defines these areas in regards to working with individuals, communities and organisations. Example Standards Addressing supportive care needs - Working with INDIVIDUALS Competency 4.1 - Demonstrates advanced communication skills by targeting support according to discipline-specific assessment and is able to elicit and respond to emotional cues with confidence Competency 4. 2 - Communicates effectively with other members of the healthcare team and refers appropriately to facilitate efficient cancer-specific intervention for current and potential needs of the person affected by cancer Competency 4. 3 - Plans and implements cancer care as part of a multidisciplinary team to meet the physical, psychological, social, cultural and spiritual aspects and information needs of the person affected by cancer Competency 4. 4 - Networks with the other services and multidisciplinary team members involved in the care of the person to ensure the care provided is part of a continuum of care Competency 4. 5 - Provides information regarding specific cancer treatment, treatment effects and multidisciplinary team contacts Critical Analysis The Victoria model is an aid towards improving the skills of the workforce. It doesn’t look at how an organisation should respond to care. This is interesting in that it then has assumed that its organisations are ready to implement supportive care and have systems in place. There are some system and implementation guidance in wider work they have undertaken and under the principles in the policy but not in a standardised format. The Victoria workforce competencies are very comprehensive and very useable by staff. They are supported by training resources around particular topics including spiritual awareness. There is some standards which refer to the indigenous population and culturally and linguistic diverse but there is not a sense of this as a priority. The needs of the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander populations are often addressed in separate documents. Thus making it difficult to establish how these standards would improve health outcomes for this population explicitly. The push for screening without this being adapted to meet cultural needs will only increase inequity. 18 There is some evidence of person centred care within the framework. While these competencies would be useful in the workforce sense, the concern would be about how organizations like DHB’s would be held accountable for their contribution to ensuring supportive care is being delivered well. 19 American Context Approach In the American context there is a variety of standards functioning at different levels: The standards from the American College of Surgeons covering aspects of Supportive and Palliative Care are the overarching ones. The Institute of Medicine of the National Academies (USA) provides a well researched basis for its model but only aspects of standards. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) provides some standards around aspects of Supportive Care in particular around distress screening. Their Supportive Care guidelines refer in most part to the context of medical management of side effects. Example Standards Institution of Medicine (IOM) All cancer care should ensure the provision of appropriate psychosocial health services by: – – – – Facilitating effective communication between patients and care providers. Identifying each patient’s psychosocial health needs. Designing and implementing a plan that: – Links the patient with needed psychosocial services. – Coordinates biomedical and psychosocial care. – Engages and supports patients in managing their illness and health. Systematically following up on, re-evaluating, and adjusting plans. Example Standards National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) Standards of Care for Distress Management Distress should be recognised, monitored, documented, and treated promptly at all stages of disease and in all settings Screening should identify the level and nature of the distress All patients should be screened for distress at their initial visits, at appropriate intervals, and as clinically indicated especially with changes in disease status (ie remission, recurrence, progression) Distress should be assessed and managed according to clinical practice guidelines ……………………………………………… 20 Example Standards American College of Surgeons: Commission on Cancer STANDARD 3.1 Patient Navigation Process A patient navigation process, driven by a community needs assessment, is established to address health care disparities and barriers to care for patients. Resources to address identified barriers may be provided either on-site or by referral to community-based or national organizations. The navigation process is evaluated, documented, and reported to the cancer committee annually. The patient navigation process is modified or enhanced each year to address additional barriers identified by the community needs assessment. DEFINITION AND REQUIREMENTS Patient navigation in cancer care refers to individualized assistance offered to patients, families, and caregivers to help overcome health care system barriers and facilitate timely access to quality medical and psychosocial care and can occur from prior to a cancer diagnosis through all phases of the cancer experience. The navigation services implemented will depend upon the particular type, severity, and/or complexity of the identified barriers. Prior to establishing the navigation process the cancer committee conducts a community needs assessment at least once during the three year survey cycle to identify: the needs of the population served, potential to improve cancer health disparities, and gaps in resources. The results from this community needs assessment can serve as the building blocks for program development, implementation, and evaluation. STANDARD 3.2 Psychosocial Distress Screening The cancer committee develops and implements a process to integrate and monitor on-site psychosocial distress screening and referral for the provision of psychosocial care. DEFINITION AND REQUIREMENTS Cancer is a complex disease process that affects patients in a variety of ways. Patients experience psychological, social, financial, and behavioral issues that can interfere with their treatment plan and adversely affect their outcome. To address the psychosocial issues experienced by patients with cancer, the 2007 report of the IOM, Cancer Care for the Whole Patient: Meeting Psychosocial Health Needs, emphasizes the importance of screening patients for distress and psychosocial health needs as a critical first step to providing high-quality cancer care. According to the NCCN, distress should be recognized, monitored, and documented and treated promptly at all stages of the disease. In addition, this report emphasizes that all patients with cancer need to be referred for the appropriate provision of care and that high-quality psychosocial cancer care includes systematic follow-up and reevaluation. The purpose of this standard is to develop a process to incorporate the screening of distress into the standard care of oncology patients and provide patients identified with distress with resources and/or referral for psychosocial needs. The psychosocial representative on the cancer committee (oncology social worker, clinical psychologist, or other mental health professional trained in the psychosocial aspects of cancer care) is required to oversee this activity and report to the cancer committee annually 21 Critical Analysis There is the input of consumers in some aspects of this work. The purpose of these standards is around ensuring compliance for an organisation. The NCCN guidelines provide some very specific guidance around some aspects of care such as distress screening. The new guidance from the American College of Surgeons has begun to provide some interesting guidance which looks at addressing the population needs to reduce inequity to support this work but it is not fully developed. There is an attempt within them to maintain a person centred focused however they are very much about large organisations. The wording and lack of overall systems approach limits the usefulness of these standards for our purposes. 22 Appendix A Supportive Care Framework Project Literature Review Plan Supportive Care Standards Aim Identify recent national and international literature related to supportive care standards to inform the development of a NZ cancer supportive care standards Approach / Sources General internet search using the following key words: standards of supportive care, psychosocial care, collaborative care, cancer standards, support standards in cancer. Standards for psychological support. Review of the following specific sites: Government sites both national and international. Psycho-oncology sites. Academic research sites. Review of the Health Outcome International work on the national supportive care implementation plan, 2011 Review of the national provisional tumour standards Standards which have been developed in other networks or workplaces obtained by both site visits and connections with relevant subject experts. In Scope Standards of Supportive care which have been created and utilised within other cancer areas. Standards which come from a wider cancer base which have a relevance to supportive care. Standards from international sources in relation to cultural competence Standards from a variety of disciplines. Standards from other areas of health which support similar concepts.ie chronic care. Literature [post the 2011 HOI documents] will be included to ensure most recent developments. Work pre 2011 will be included where there are gaps in more recent research or where it still has ongoing relevancy. Standards which provide useful formatting direction rather than content. Out of Scope The review makes the assumption that the majority of stakeholders involved in this work are aware of the need for supportive care and its benefits. As such this literature is not going to be focused on this specifically. Critique approach What evidence is there that the standards are based on person centered care/empowerment models/Social Justice? What evidence is there that the standards have been measured against 23 End product improving outcomes for Maori? What Equity approaches are evident in the international standards? Cultural context the standards were created in and how is that reflected? Principals behind the standards how do they align with our principles or needs in the NZ context? Where possible what was the method of construction - was it co designed, who were the influencers of the standards? Terminology - what is being used and how does that reflect the principles we are aligning to? Have the standards have been implemented and is there any feedback? What was the purpose of the design - to change a system or capture current work? What organisations were included- did it extend into the NGO sector? The document produced will be in a summary format to: Inform the model of care workshop Inform the Ministry to inform their work relating to psychosocial care Be provided to other cancer organisations as requested The document needs to be usable by all key stakeholders and the following will inform its production: Efforts will be made to steer away as much a possible from academic language and technical research terminology. For easier engagement in it will be a summary format with for the models the most relevant being presented in a table format to allow easy comparison. It will be distributed prior to the workshop to allow for best value thinking in the day. The document is seen as a workshop tool rather than a complete resource on standards of supportive care. 24 Appendix B: Websites for Models and Standards of Care. NZ National Tumour Standards - http://www.health.govt.nz/our-work/diseases-and-conditions/cancerprogramme/faster-cancer-treatment-programme/national-tumour-standards Australia Victoria - www.supportivecancercarevictoria.org Canada Ontario - www.cancercare.on.ca Canadian Association of Psychosocial Oncology - www.capo.ca/CAPOstandards.pdf UK NICE - www.nice.org.uk/guidance/csgsp American IOM - www.iom.edu/reports/2007/Cancer-Care-for-the-Whole-Patient-meeting-Psychosocial HealthNeeds.aspx Commission on Cancer {American College of Surgeons} - www.facs.org/qualityprogrames/cancer/coc/standards NCCN- www.nccn.org/professionals/physican-gls/f-guidance.asp