What is an essential nursing function when caring for a patient with cirrhosis?

  • PDFView PDF

Under a Creative Commons license

Open access

Highlights

Patients have limited understanding of liver cirrhosis, its prognosis or treatment.

There is patient and family dissatisfaction with the quality of information, which was perceived as being too medicalised.

Addressing unmet information needs could support patients to plan their care and reduce anxiety.

Earlier integration of palliative care with liver and community services could improve the quality of care for patients.

Better tools assessing current and future care needs may help to identify which patients would benefit from earlier supportive and palliative care referral.

Background & Aims

People with cirrhosis have unmet needs, which could benefit from a palliative care approach. Developing effective services needs to be based on evidence from those with personal experience. This review aims to explore; patient and family perspectives of perceived needs including communication; health professionals’ perspectives on delivery of care and improving palliative care between specialities.

Methods

A literature search was conducted in Medline, Embase and CINAHL using key words reporting on the perspectives of patients with liver cirrhosis [18 years and over], family members or health professionals on the provision of care in liver cirrhosis. Study quality was assessed using the Mixed Methods Appraisal Tool. Qualitative and quantitative findings were grouped together according to the main relevant themes identified.

Results

Nineteen research studies predominantly from high-income Western countries were identified, with a total sample consisting of 1,413 patients, 31 family carers and 733 health professionals. Patients and family members had limited understanding of cirrhosis or its impact. They wanted better information about their disease, its treatment and help with psychological and practical needs. Health professionals had difficulty communicating about these issues to patients and their families. General practitioners left care predominantly to the liver clinicians, who lacked confidence to have discussions about prognosis or future care preferences. The role of palliative care was recognised as important in caring for this group through earlier integration with liver and community services.

Conclusions

Health professionals need support to improve their communication with patients, to address patients’ broader needs beyond medical treatment and to develop new models to improve palliative care coordination between different medical specialities. Future research should focus on developing communication aides, testing existing tools to identify suitable patients for supportive care and exploring robust ways of evaluating supportive care interventions, with more studies needed from middle- and low-income countries.

Registration number: PROSPERO CRD42017064770.

Lay summary

Patients and their families had a poor understanding of advanced liver disease and its impact on them. They need more information about the treatments they receive and how to get practical and psychological support. Liver specialists and GPs found it difficult to talk to patients and their families about the seriousness of advanced liver disease and the lack of healthcare options available to them if their condition gets worse. All doctors and nurses involved in the care of patients with advanced liver disease recognise that palliative and supportive care have an important role in improving patient care.

Keywords

Cirrhosis

Palliative care

Supportive care

Communication

Cited by [0]

© 2018 European Association for the Study of the Liver. Published by Elsevier B.V.

Gastroenterology and hepatology

Protocol

Nurse-led clinic for patients with liver cirrhosis—effects on health-related quality of life: study protocol of a pragmatic multicentre randomised controlled trial

  1. //orcid.org/0000-0002-0264-9992Maria Hjorth1,2,
  2. Daniel Sjöberg1,
  3. Anncarin Svanberg2,3,4,
  4. Elenor Kaminsky3,
  5. Sophie Langenskiöld3,
  6. Fredrik Rorsman2
  1. 1 Center of Clinical Reaerch in Dalarna, Falun, Sweden
  2. 2 Department of Medical Sciences, Uppsala Universitet Medicinska fakulteten, Uppsala, Sweden
  3. 3 Department of Public Health and Caring Sciences, Uppsala University, Falun, Sweden
  4. 4 Dalarna University, Falun, Sweden
  1. Correspondence to Mrs Maria Hjorth; maria.hjorth{at}medsci.uu.se

Abstract

Introduction Liver cirrhosis affects health-related quality of life [HRQoL] even in its early stages. Morbidity is especially high when the disease decompensates and self-care actions become essential. Nurse involvement in secondary prevention in other chronic diseases has contributed to better symptom control, less need of inpatient care and improved HRQoL. In order to evaluate the impact of nurse involvement in the follow-up of patients with liver cirrhosis, we decided to compare structured nurse-led clinics, inspired by Dorothea Orem’s nursing theory and motivational strategies, with a group of patients receiving standard care. The primary outcome is HRQoL and the secondary outcomes are quality of care, visits to outpatient clinics or hospitals, disease progress and health literacy.

Methods and analysis This is a pragmatic, multicentre randomised controlled study conducted at six Swedish hepatology departments. Eligible patients are adults with diagnosed cirrhosis of the liver [n=500]. Participants are randomised into either an intervention with nurse-led follow-up group or into a standard of care group. Recruitment started in November 2016 and is expected to proceed until 2020. Primary outcomes are physical and mental HRQoL measured by RAND-36 at enrolment, after 1 and 2 years.

Ethics and dissemination The study is ethically approved by the Regional Ethical Review Board in Uppsala. The results shall be disseminated in international conferences and peer-reviewed articles.

Trial registration number NCT02957253; Pre-results.

  • liver cirrhosis
  • nurse-led clinic
  • health-related quality Of life
  • qualituy of care
  • economics
  • nursing

This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial [CC BY-NC 4.0] license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: //creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

Statistics from Altmetric.com

Request Permissions

If you wish to reuse any or all of this article please use the link below which will take you to the Copyright Clearance Center’s RightsLink service. You will be able to get a quick price and instant permission to reuse the content in many different ways.

  • liver cirrhosis
  • nurse-led clinic
  • health-related quality Of life
  • qualituy of care
  • economics
  • nursing

Strengths and limitations of this study

  • This pragmatic multicentre randomised controlled study design enables evaluation of a nurse-led clinic intervention in patients with liver cirrhosis in the real-life context.

  • All nurses involved in the study are proficient in the field of liver diseases, having a holistic understanding of the situation of liver cirrhosis.

  • The generic health-related quality of life instrument RAND-36 is used as a Swedish version of a liver-specific instrument is currently unavailable.

  • There is a risk of unwittingly transferring the intervention to the control group. This is counteracted by the multicentre design and will shorten the time for recruitment of participants.

Introduction 

The incidence of liver cirrhosis in Sweden is approximately 14 per 100 000 citizens each year.1 It is a disease with high mortality as well as high morbidity, affecting patient’s health-related quality of life [HRQoL]. Fatigue and depression are already frequent during the early, compensated, phase of liver cirrhosis and are believed to impair HRQoL by affecting the patient’s social life.2 HRQoL is further impaired in the decompensated patients, when symptoms of ascites, hepatic encephalopathy [HE] or variceal haemorrhage occur.3 4

In the compensated stages, lifestyle changes are important to prevent or delay disease progression. While in the decompensated phase, customised lifestyle changes and self-care become essential in the management of the disease.5 Unstructured follow-up in outpatient settings causes frequent readmissions due to the reappearance of complications of cirrhosis. The reason may be drug-related side effects, for example, diuretics, non-adherence to self-care or medical treatment. One-third of these episodes are said to be preventable with closer follow-up in an outpatient setting.6 7

Motivating patients for self-care activities is essential in nursing care. For this, Orem’s theory of nursing,8 consisting of the three theories: self-care, self-care deficit and the nursing system may be applied. This theory guides nurses to identify and support patients to enter self-care for better symptom control and improved health.8–10 In liver cirrhosis, management of patients with liver cirrhosis is traditionally taken care of by physicians, while nurse-led clinics are still rare. However, previous studies on liver cirrhosis, nurse-led clinics have suggested that nurse-led clinics will contribute to better patient concordance with physician recommendations11–13 and medical treatment,11 12 with positive effects on patients HRQoL.12 Furthermore, there are indications that nurse-led clinics increase the quality of care by increasing the number of patients treated according to medical healthcare guidelines.12 Finally, the patients have reported a high degree of satisfaction by nursing care in such outpatient settings.12 14 Despite these reports, the significance of adjunctive nurse-led clinic to standard care by physician in liver cirrhosis is unclear. Conversely, in chronic heart failure, nurse-led care is established and proved equally effective as traditional care by the physician within outpatient settings.15 The holistic and person-centred approaches by the nurse, including motivational strategies, have been shown to be crucial in the secondary prevention of chronic heart disease, reducing the need for inpatient care and to increase HRQoL.16 17 Hence, the experience from nurse-led clinics in chronic heart disease is likely to provide guidance regarding content, methods and necessary skills in the set-up of nurse-led clinics within the field of liver cirrhosis.

The aim with the present study is to compare HRQoL in patients with liver cirrhosis receiving either adjunctive nursing care based on Orem’s nursing theory or standard care only in outpatient settings.

Methods and analysis

The protocol follows the statement of Standard Protocol Items: Recommendations for Interventional Trials 2013,18 for study protocol and Template for Intervention Dscription and Replication [TIDieR].19 .

Study design

The study has a pragmatic, multicentre randomised controlled comparative design.

Study arms

Patients in the intervention group obtain structured visits to nurse-led clinics depending on the severity of the disease. The intervention is adjunctive, that is, the intervention is added to standard care. Patients in the control group get standard inpatient and outpatient care according to clinical routines.

Study sites

The study settings consist of six outpatient clinics at hepatology departments in Sweden, two county hospitals and four university hospitals. None of the clinics had structured nursing care for patients with liver cirrhosis at the beginning of the study. The six outpatient clinics serve a population of approximately 2 000 000 individuals, comprising about 20% of Sweden’s population.

Eligibility criteria

Diagnosis of liver cirrhosis is based on clinical investigation, laboratory findings, histology, MRI, computer tomography, ultrasound or elastography. Factors likely to strongly affect the primary variable due to other reasons than liver cirrhosis, that is, severe comorbidities and those unable to adhere to the study protocol, that is, persistent, overt HE, are excluded. Inclusion and exclusion criteria are presented in table 1.

Table 1

Inclusion and exclusion criteria 

Screening and recruitment of participants

Invitation letters are sent by intervention nurses [INs], offering oral information. Patients are invited to a screening visit to IN for baseline measurements. Those who meet inclusion criteria are registered. Patients, who agree to participate, hereafter denoted as participants, are randomised after giving informed consent. Newly diagnosed patients are recruited consecutively [figure 1]. INs are responsible facilitators and consecutively follow participants.

  • Download figure
  • Open in new tab
  • Download powerpoint

Figure 1

Recruitment and randomisation of participants. CC, compensated control group; CI, compensated intervention group; DC, decompensated control group; DI, decompensated intervention group; LC, liver cirrhosis.

Randomisation

Computerised randomisation [Randomize.Net, Interrand, Ottawa, Canada] is performed at the screening visit with randomly mixed block sizes of 4, 6 and 8, stratified by study site and disease severity in terms of compensated or decompensated state [figure 1]. Blinding of the randomisation sequence is applicable to all involved personnel; allocation will be 1:1. Baseline measurements are completed before randomisation. Further blinding is not possible in this study.

Description of the intervention

Participants in the intervention group offer scheduled individual visits to INs at the nurse-led clinic, in addition to visits to a physician according to clinical practice. Intervals between visits to the nurse-led clinic are varying from once yearly in compensated stable disease, up to two visit per month in decompensated disease [figure 2]. The tailored frequency and content of visits are individualised to promote person-centred care [table 2].

  • Download figure
  • Open in new tab
  • Download powerpoint

Figure 2

Study measurements and intervention nurse visit interval. CRT, continuous reaction time; IN, intervention nurse; MELD, Model for End-Stage Liver Disease; NVS, Newest Vital Sign; PHES-test, psychometric HE score; QPP, quality of care from the patient’s perspective; RFH-NPT, Royal Free Hospital-Nutritional Prioritising Tool.

Table 2

Description of the intervention

Participants in the control group will receive standard care by physicians within hepatology inpatient or outpatient clinics as required and a yearly follow-up for data collection by IN within the study [figure 2].

Each visit to INs contains assessment of disease severity to enable early action against disease progression and malnutrition [table 2]. The intervention includes treatment and nursing care inspired by Dorothea Orem’s nursing theory.10 Further, motivational interviewing [MI],20 communication strategies will be used. Both Orem’s theory and MI implies that individuals have an intrinsic motivation to make appropriate choices, to promote health and prevent disease or to perform actions to counteract disease.10 20 The task of the IN is to assess the participants’ self-care needs and their ability to perform essential self-care in order to discover self-care deficits. To evoke participants’ motivation, INs listen and reflect on preparatory and mobilising change talk. In addition, INs give information adherent to MI techniques to facilitate participants understanding of actual self-care and medical treatment [figure 3]. When applicable, INs offer next of kin instructions to help the participant achieve self-care.

The areas of the intervention are: [1] monitoring risk factors for deterioration of the liver disease, [2] information and motivation to perform self-care and adhere to medical treatment, [3] nutrition assessment and support, [4] motivation of lifestyle changes essential for preventing or delaying disease progress and [5] psychosocial care. A booklet written by MH is handed to all INs describing these five areas converted into terms of Orem’s nursing theory.

One objective of INs’ use of MI is to promote engagement and increased collaboration between IN and participant via the MI spirit concepts: partnership, evocation, compassion and acceptance. Another objective is that INs evoke participants’ own motivation and explore patients’ own thoughts about a target behaviour when there is need for behavioural change. When participants express mobilising ‘change talk’,20 they are ready for the planning phase [figure 3]. The intervention is individually tailored and INs’ activities depend on actual needs. An information booklet about liver cirrhosis is available to participants as a complement to oral information.

Standard care includes flexible visits or telephone follow-up by physicians, gastroscopies, ascites drainage, registered nurse telephone counselling by a nurse not participating in the study and inpatient care.

Intervention nurses

At each of the six clinics, 1–2 INs are involved in the intervention. All of these are registered nurses with a minimum of 2 years experience from hepatology inpatient or outpatient care. Implementation of the intervention and training of INs include a 6-hour seminar with a short description of MI and Orem theories followed by a 3-day training to perform MI. INs are also educated in pathophysiology of liver cirrhosis, nursing care according to presenting symptoms, study bias and study instruments. Scheduled tutorial group sessions to follow the intervention and MI practice will be due every 6 months for all INs during the study period.

Study piloting

A pilot of the intervention and patient questionnaire was performed in Falun from 2014 to 2015 with 26 participating patients. The aim was to define the actual size of the population available for the study and to assess the time and budget for the INs’ assignment.

Baseline sociodemographic data collection

Sociodemographic data collected at enrolment are presented in figure 2.

Primary outcome

Physical and mental HRQoL are the two main outcomes in the present study measured by RAND-36.21 RAND-36 consists of 36 category scale questions: the answer to each question ranges from 0 to 100, a higher value predicts better health. From the RAND-36 questionnaire, eight subscales are derived: [1] physical functioning, [2] role limitations caused by physical health problems, [3] pain, [4] energy/fatigue, [5] social functioning, [6] role limitations caused by emotional problems, [7] emotional well-being and [8] general health perception. Out of the eight subscales, two summary components are derived: Physical Component Summary [PCS] and Mental Component Summary [MCS].21 22 HRQoL measurements by the RAND-36 has high validity and reliability to identify differences in HRQoL over time within and compared with patient populations with different chronic diseases.22

Secondary outcomes

  • Patient’s perspective of quality of care due to a change in follow-up strategy: The questionnaire quality of care from the patient’s perspective [QPP]23 includes four dimensions: [1] medical-technical competence, [2] physical-technical conditions, [3] identity-orientated approach and [4] sociocultural atmosphere. Within each dimension, the participants first value their experience of the specific care aspects they have received [[1] totally agree, [2] agree in large part, [3] partly agree or [4] do not agree] and second, the importance of these aspects [[1] of greatest importance, [2] of great importance, [3] of some importance or [4] of little or no importance]. The difference between the experienced care and the importance of each question is categorised as: excess of, balanced or lack of quality of care. A short form of QOP has been found valid and reliable.24 In the present study, participants receive a modified QPP 38-item questionnaire adjusted for patients with liver cirrhosis in outpatient care. The modification has been approved by the instrument developer. The questionnaire includes a variation of yes/no questions, category scales from 1 to 4 and open-ended questions.

  • Visits at outpatient clinics and admissions to hospital: Visits at outpatient clinics, number of admissions to hospitals and days of inpatient care at medical wards or intensive care units will be recorded as measures of healthcare consumption. In case of significant clinical outcomes, these data will later be used to perform a separate health economic analysis.

  • Disease progress

    1. Child Pugh score25 includes five variables: serum albumin, serum bilirubin, prothrombin time, ascites and encephalopathy. Each variable grading from 1 to 3 and the total range is 5–15. A higher value means a more advanced disease. Three risk classes are derived: A=score 5–6, B=score 7–9 and C=score 10–15.26

    2. The Model for End-Stage Liver Disease [MELD]27 predicts the 3-month mortality of patients with chronic end-stage liver disease. Based on laboratory findings, MELD is a valid and reliable instrument. The formula for MELD is constant for disease aetiology, the calculation score is: 9.57 x log e [creatinine mg/dL]+3.78 x log e [bilirubin mg/dL]+11.20 x log e [INR] +6.4. The score is continuous, ranging from 6 to 40, a high score predicts an increased risk of mortality within 3 months.28

    3. The Royal Free Hospital-Nutritional Prioritising Tool [RFH-NPT]29 assesses the risk of malnutrition in liver cirrhosis as a predictor of disease deterioration and transplant-free survival. RFH-NPT correlates with deterioration of the liver disease and divides participants into low [0 points], medium [1 point] or high [2–7 points] risk groups for malnutrition. Parameters taken into account are nutritional history [unplanned weight loss, dietary intake body mass index] and current complications of liver cirrhosis [acute alcoholic hepatitis, ascites, general fluid overload]. The instrument used in the study is a translation into Swedish from the English version. Validation of the translation is made in a research seminar within the research group.

    4. Appearance of decompensation episodes [eg, ascites, overt HE and variceal bleed] is assessed at screening, after 12 months and after 24 months through medical records. HE is common in liver cirrhosis with a cumulative risk of 30%–40%.30 According to the West-Haven criteria,31 HE ranges from 0 to 4. Grades 0–1 mean subclinical or minimal symptoms [covert HE] and grades 2–4 mean severe neuropsychiatric symptoms [overt HE].30 Even milder grades of HE affect HRQoL.30 31 In the majority of cases, HE is treatable. Two psychometric tests in combination are recommended to detect covert HE.30 In this study, the psychometric HE score [PHES] and continuous reaction time [CRT] are used:

      1. PHES consists of five-step paper and pencil tests,32 and includes a line drawing test, a serial dotting test and a digit symbol test to examine motor speed and accuracy, visual perception, visuospatial orientation, visual construction, concentration and attention. The test ends up with a score ranging from +6 to −18; −4 or less is the cut-off for a pathological result.

      2. CRT33 is a 10 min test with auditory stimuli in headphones in intervals of every 2–6 s. It tests the reaction time and endurance by pushing a trigger button after a signal. Using the software EKHO reaction-time analysis tool, an index

Bài Viết Liên Quan

Chủ Đề