Tanya Pidgeon
University of Western Australia
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Featured researches published by Tanya Pidgeon.
Palliative Medicine | 2015
Malcolm R Masso; Samuel F Allingham; Maree Banfield; Claire Johnson; Tanya Pidgeon; Patsy Yates; Kathy Eagar
Background: The concept of palliative care consisting of five distinct, clinically meaningful, phases (stable, unstable, deteriorating, terminal and bereavement) was developed in Australia about 20 years ago and is used routinely for communicating clinical status, care planning, quality improvement and funding. Aim: To test the reliability and acceptability of revised definitions of Palliative Care Phase. Design: Multi-centre cross-sectional study involving pairs of clinicians independently rating patients according to revised definitions of Palliative Care Phase. Setting/participants: Clinicians from 10 Australian palliative care services, including 9 inpatient units and 1 mixed inpatient/community-based service. Results: A total of 102 nursing and medical clinicians participated, undertaking 595 paired assessments of 410 patients, of which 90.7% occurred within 2 h. Clinicians rated 54.8% of patients in the stable phase, 15.8% in the unstable phase, 20.8% in the deteriorating phase and 8.7% in the terminal phase. Overall agreement between clinicians’ rating of Palliative Care Phase was substantial (kappa = 0.67; 95% confidence interval = 0.61–0.70). A moderate level of inter-rater reliability was apparent across all participating sites. The results indicated that Palliative Care Phase was an acceptable measure, with no significant difficulties assigning patients to a Palliative Care Phase and a good fit between assessment of phase and the definition of that phase. The most difficult phase to distinguish from other phases was the deteriorating phase. Conclusion: Policy makers, funders and clinicians can be confident that Palliative Care Phase is a reliable and acceptable measure that can be used for care planning, quality improvement and funding purposes.
BMJ | 2016
Tanya Pidgeon; Claire Johnson; Patsy Yates; Maree Banfield; Leanne Lester; Samuel F Allingham; Sonia Bird; Kathy Eagar
Context In Australia, patients at the end of life with complex symptoms and needs are often referred to palliative care services (PCSs), but little is known about the symptoms of patients receiving palliative care in different settings. Objective To explore patients’ levels of pain and other symptoms while receiving care from PCSs. Method PCSs registered through Australias national Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration (PCOC) were invited to participate in a survey between 2008 and 2011. Patients (or if unable, a proxy) were invited to complete the Palliative Care Outcome Scale. Results Questionnaires were completed for 1800 patients. One-quarter of participants reported severe pain, 20% reported severe ‘other symptoms’, 20% reported severe patient anxiety, 45% reported severe family anxiety, 66% experienced depressed feelings and 19% reported severe problems with self-worth. Participants receiving care in major cities reported higher levels of depressed feelings than participants in inner regional areas. Participants receiving care in community and combined service settings reported higher levels of need for information, more concerns about wasted time, and lower levels of family anxiety and depressed feelings when compared to inpatients. Participants in community settings had lower levels of concern about practical matters than inpatients. Conclusions Patients receiving care from Australian PCSs have physical and psychosocial concerns that are often complex and rated as ‘severe’. Our findings highlight the importance of routine, comprehensive assessment of patients’ concerns and the need for Specialist Palliative Care clinicians to be vigilant in addressing pain and other symptoms in a timely, systematic and holistic manner, whatever the care setting.
Palliative Medicine | 2016
Malcolm R Masso; Samuel F Allingham; Claire Johnson; Tanya Pidgeon; Patsy Yates; Kathy Eagar
Background: The Palliative Care Problem Severity Score is a clinician-rated tool to assess problem severity in four palliative care domains (pain, other symptoms, psychological/spiritual, family/carer problems) using a 4-point categorical scale (absent, mild, moderate, severe). Aim: To test the reliability and acceptability of the Palliative Care Problem Severity Score. Design: Multi-centre, cross-sectional study involving pairs of clinicians independently rating problem severity using the tool. Setting/participants: Clinicians from 10 Australian palliative care services: 9 inpatient units and 1 mixed inpatient/community-based service. Results: A total of 102 clinicians participated, with almost 600 paired assessments completed for each domain, involving 420 patients. A total of 91% of paired assessments were undertaken within 2 h. Strength of agreement for three of the four domains was moderate: pain (Kappa = 0.42, 95% confidence interval = 0.36 to 0.49); psychological/spiritual (Kappa = 0.48, 95% confidence interval = 0.42 to 0.54); family/carer (Kappa = 0.45, 95% confidence interval = 0.40 to 0.52). Strength of agreement for the remaining domain (other symptoms) was fair (Kappa = 0.38, 95% confidence interval = 0.32 to 0.45). Conclusion: The Palliative Care Problem Severity Score is an acceptable measure, with moderate reliability across three domains. Variability in inter-rater reliability across sites and participant feedback indicate that ongoing education is required to ensure that clinicians understand the purpose of the tool and each of its domains. Raters familiar with the patient they were assessing found it easier to assign problem severity, but this did not improve inter-rater reliability.
Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2018
Tanya Pidgeon; Claire Johnson; Leanne Lester; Patsy Yates; Samuel F Allingham; Sonia Bird; Kathy Eagar
Archive | 2016
Alanna M Connolly; Samuel F Allingham; Sonia Bird; Tanya Pidgeon; Sabina P Clapham; Karen Quinsey; Linda M Foskett
Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2016
Malcolm R Masso; Samuel F Allingham; Claire Johnson; Tanya Pidgeon; Patsy Yates; Kathy Eagar
Faculty of Health; Institute of Health and Biomedical Innovation | 2016
Tanya Pidgeon; Claire Johnson; Patsy Yates; Maree Banfield; Leanne Lester; Samuel F Allingham; Sonia Bird; Kathy Eagar
Archive | 2015
Alanna M Connolly; Sonia Bird; Sabina P Clapham; Tanya Pidgeon; Karen Quinsey; Linda M Foskett; Samuel F Allingham
Archive | 2014
Tanya Pidgeon; Claire Johnson; Sonia Bird
Archive | 2014
Alanna M Holloway; Sabina P Clapham; Tanya Pidgeon; Karen Quinsey; Linda M Foskett; Samuel F Allingham