Dying patients and their families face many challenges near the end-of-life. Not only do patients often experience physical distress, but they also have feelings of loss of dignity, isolation, and uncertainty. Family members also face many challenges. They bear witness to the suffering of loved ones, and they face uncertainty, loss, and at times a mounting sense of helplessness. The purpose of this study is to introduce and evaluate a new intervention called Dignity Talk, meant to enhance end-of-life experience for both patients and their families. Dignity Talk is based on a set of questions by which terminally ill patients and their family members can engage in meaningful conversations with each other. It is intended to lessen feelings of loss and helplessness and enhance feelings of connectedness by facilitating conversations that tap into a sense of meaning and purpose, sharing of memories, wishes, hopes, and giving guidance to those who will soon be left behind. In Phase 1, 20 patients and family members will help finalize the method and Dignity Talk question framework (is it easy to understand, do the investigators have the right questions, and is the wording sensitive). In Phase 2 of the study the investigators will ask 100 patient-family pairs for feedback about Dignity Talk: what influence it had on their palliative care experience, whether it works well, and whether this intervention should become a regular part of palliative care. The investigators will also ask for feedback from health-care providers in both phases. We are requesting approval for an amendment to the healthcare provider feedback focus group questions. Will add those documents when they are approved. Four to six months after the death of their loved one, the investigators will contact the family member to ask their thoughts about Dignity Talk, how it shaped their experience of their grief and bereavement. The investigators expect that the study will show that Dignity Talk can be an effective, highly accessible palliative care intervention, which will enhance the end-of-life experience for palliative patients and the families who support them.
See above summary
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
56
Patient and family member participants will be given the Dignity Talk framework questions and asked to use them in conversation with each other. Research nurse will return at day 4-6 to confirm both participants have covered all items they wish to discuss. 4-6 months after the death of patient, family members will be contacted in order to collect data pertaining to their bereavement experiences and distress. Will also be asked to complete evaluative feedback on Dignity Talk.
There have not been any non-completers - this arm not being used currently
Victoria Hospice
Victoria, British Columbia, Canada
St. Boniface Hospital
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Riverview Health Centre
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Concordia Hospital
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Deer Lodge Centre
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Grace Hospital
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Health Sciences Centre
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Manitoba Renal Program
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Seven Oaks Hospital
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Victoria Hospital
Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
...and 3 more locations
Family communication connectedness Index
Time frame: 31 months
Number of Participants with Adverse Events as a Measure of Safety and Tolerability
Time frame: 31 months
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