Palliative Care and End-of-Life Care: PI 05g-Proportion of palliative care phases in which patient distress from breathing problems remains absent/mild (patient-rated), 2021
Indicator Attributes
Identifying and definitional attributes | |
Metadata item type:![]() | Indicator |
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Indicator type:![]() | Indicator |
Short name:![]() | PI 05g-Proportion of palliative care phases in which patient distress from breathing problems remains absent/mild (patient-rated), 2021 |
Synonymous names:![]() | Change in symptoms and problems (PCOC) |
METEOR identifier:![]() | 742783 |
Registration status:![]() | Health!, Qualified 21/10/2021 |
Description:![]() | Palliative care phases that started and ended with the patient reporting absent/mild distress from breathing problems as a proportion of all palliative care phases that started with the patient reporting absent/mild distress from breathing problems, using the patient-rated PCOC Symptom Assessment Scale (SAS). |
Rationale:![]() | The National Palliative Care Strategy 2018 (the Strategy; DoH 2019) has stated that quality of care should be routinely monitored in order for care to be assessed and improved across all care settings. In particular, the Strategy emphasises that it is essential that people receive palliative care that matches their needs and preferences. Monitoring for change in key symptoms during palliative care provides an indication of whether the care needs of a patient and their family are being met. Palliative care phases are used to describe the care needs of patients and their families to indicate whether or not the current care plan meets these needs. A positive outcome for patients is to have symptoms and problems in the absent/mild range during their palliative care phase. For patients who experience moderate/severe symptoms and/or problems, the goal is for this to reduce to absent/mild by the end of the phase (PCOC 2021). |
Indicator set:![]() | Palliative Care and End-of-Life Care Key Performance Indicators 2021 Health!, Qualified 21/10/2021 |
Collection and usage attributes | |
Computation description:![]() | Coverage/scope: Palliative care services contributing to the Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC). The PCOC is a national program that aims to systemtically drive improvements in patient and carer outcomes using standardised validated clinical assessment tools to benchmark and measure outcomes in palliative care. Participation in the PCOC is voluntary and open to all palliative care service providers across Australia. Contribution to the collection is sought from services in:
Methodology:
Presented as a percentage. |
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Computation:![]() | (Numerator ÷ Denominator) x 100 |
Numerator:![]() | Number of palliative care phases within the reference period where patient distress from breathing problems is absent/mild at the start and end of the phase |
Numerator data elements:![]() | |
Denominator:![]() | Number of palliative care phases within the reference period where patient distress from breathing problems is absent/mild at the start of the phase |
Denominator data elements:![]() | |
Disaggregation:![]() | Service attributes:
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Disaggregation data elements:![]() | |
Comments:![]() | Reference period for 2021 reporting: 2020. |
Representational attributes | |
Representation class:![]() | Percentage |
Data type:![]() | Real |
Unit of measure:![]() | Phase of care |
Format:![]() | N[NN]{.N[N]} |
Indicator conceptual framework | |
Framework and dimensions:![]() | 1. Effectiveness |
Accountability attributes | |
Organisation responsible for providing data:![]() | Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) |
Other issues caveats:![]() | Data for this indicator is sourced from PCOC. PCOC’s national longitudinal database was established in 2005, and in 2021 consists of more than 300,000 patients and greater than 1 million palliative care phases provided within hospitals, patients’ homes and in residential aged care facilities. The number of services reporting palliative care patient outcome data increased from 127 services in 2009 to 188 services in 2019, with most specialist palliative care providers within Australia participating in this voluntary national program. PCOC has a set of rule checks and flags that ensure consistency of data entry at the point of collection by trained staff from participating services, and also comprehensive data quality checks at the point of data entry, data receipt and prior to data analysis (Woods et al. 2021). Limited missing data values are evident (i.e. <4% per item) (Daveson et al 2021). Participation in PCOC is voluntary and open to all palliative care service providers across Australia. The data are administrative and embedded into routine clinical practice. |
Source and reference attributes | |
Submitting organisation:![]() | Australian Institute of Health and Welfare on behalf of the Palliative Care and End-of-Life Care Data Development Working Group |
Reference documents:![]() | Daveson BA, Allingham SF, Clapham S, Johnson CE, Currow DC, Yates P, et al. 2021. The PCOC Symptom Assessment Scale (SAS): A valid measure for daily use at point of care and in palliative care programs. PLoS ONE 16(3): e0247250. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0247250 DoH (Department of Health) 2019. National Palliative Care Strategy 2018. Canberra: Department of Health. Viewed 9 June 2021, https://www.health.gov.au/resources/ PCOC (Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration) November 2012. PCOC Version 3.0 Dataset: Data Dictionary and Technical Guidelines (version 1.2.0). Viewed 9 June 2021, https://documents.uow.edu.au/content/groups/ PCOC 2021. Patient Outcomes in Palliative Care: National Report July to December 2020. Viewed 9 June 2021, https://documents.uow.edu.au/content/groups/ Woods JA, Johnson CE, Allingham SF, Ngo HT, Katzenellenbogen JM, Thompson SC 2021. Collaborative data familiarisation and quality assessment: Reflections from use of a national dataset to investigate palliative care for Indigenous Australians. Health Inf Manag; 50(1-2):64-75. doi: 10.1177/1833358320908957. |