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Background: Growing global demand for palliative care services has prompted generalist clinicians to provide adjunct support to specialist teams. Paramedics are uniquely placed to respond to these patients in the community. However, embedding palliative care principles into their core business will require multifactorial interventions at structural, healthcare service and individual clinician and consumer levels.
Aim: To develop a palliative paramedicine framework suitable for national implementation, to standardise best practice in Australia.
Design: Delphi study utilising questionnaire completion; each round informed the need for, and content of, the next round. Free text comments were also sought in Round 1. Two rounds of Delphi were undertaken.
Setting/participants: Sixty-eight participants took part in Round 1, representing six countries, and 66 in Round 2. Participants included paramedics, palliative care doctors and nurses, general practitioners, researchers and carers with lived experience and expertise in palliative paramedicine.
Results: Seventeen of the original 24 components gained consensus; 6 components were modified; and 9 new components arose from Round 1. All modified and new components gained consensus in Round 2. Only one original component did not gain consensus across both rounds and was excluded from the final 32-component framework.
Conclusion: This study has developed a comprehensive national framework addressing the macro-, meso- and micro-level interventions required to standardise palliative paramedicine across Australia. Future research ought to engage a multidisciplinary team to create an implementation strategy, addressing any perceived barriers, facilitators and challenges for applying the framework into policy and practice.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/02692163241234004 | DOI Listing |
Aims: Professional practice in paramedicine is evolving rapidly, and with this evolution comes a growing ability - and responsibility - for paramedics to contribute to public health. Palliative and end-of-life care (PEOLC) public health is one such area where paramedicine has begun to contribute substantially and might still have significant untapped potential.This article explores developments in PEOLC paramedicine in the Scottish Highlands, an area classified as remote and rural, characterised by low population density, widely spaced communities and susceptibility to health inequalities created by access to healthcare, especially to specialist services.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Palliat Care
July 2025
School of Nursing, Midwifery & Paramedicine, Faculty of Health Sciences, Australian Catholic University, 1100 Nudgee Road, Banyo, QLD, 4014, Australia.
Background: Hospitalised palliative care patients are at risk of pressure injury. The development of pressure injuries causes physical and psychological distress for patients. Therefore, the prevention of hospital-acquired pressure injury is a nursing priority.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAustralas Emerg Care
June 2025
Te Ārai Palliative Care & End of Life Research Group, School of Nursing, The University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand; Adult Emergency Department, Te Toka Tumai, Te Whatu Ora, Private Bag 92024, Auckland Mail Centre, Auckland 1142, New Zealand.
Background: Ambulance personnel play an important role in supporting families during death, dying, and bereavement. Evidence-based clinical practice guidelines are crucial for ensuring high-quality ambulance care. However, it is unknown what guidance currently informs care of bereaved families.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFInfect Dis Health
May 2025
Nursing and Midwifery, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia; School of Nursing and Health, Avondale University, Cooranbong, New South Wales, Australia; Central Coast Local Health District, Gosford Hospital, Gosford, New South Wales, Australia. Electronic address: Brett.Mitchell@avondale
Background: Oral care has a critical role in hospital-acquired infection prevention, is part of fundamental nursing care, yet is poorly undertaken in hospital. The study's aim was to understand Australian nurses' perceptions of their role in oral care and their experience providing oral care in hospital, with the focus on enablers and barriers.
Methods: A qualitative exploratory descriptive design.
J Clin Nurs
May 2025
Palliative Care Unit, The Prince Charles Hospital, Brisbane, Queensland, Australia.
Aim: To describe the cumulative incidence and characteristics of hospital-acquired pressure injury in acute palliative patients.
Design: Secondary data analysis of hospital-acquired pressure injuries during 2019-2022.
Methods: The setting was a palliative care unit at a tertiary hospital in Queensland, Australia, including adult (≥ 18 years) acute-phase palliative inpatients.