Korean J Hosp Palliat Care.  2014 Dec;17(4):259-269. 10.14475/kjhpc.2014.17.4.259.

Perception on the Importance of Items on Psychosocial Assessment among Hospice and Palliative Care Social Workers

Affiliations
  • 1Medical Social Services Team, Korea University Guro Hospital, Seoul, Korea.
  • 2Graduate School of Social Welfare, Korea University, Seoul, Korea. mojohwang@korea.ac.kr

Abstract

PURPOSE
This preliminary study is aimed at developing standardized tools for psycho-social assessment of patients in needs for hospice/palliative care. To accomplish the purpose, investigators examined effects of perceptions of social workers on the importance of psycho-social domains of assessment in hospice/palliative care settings. Moreover, investigators paid attention to variances of perceptions of social workers' along with types of institution and credentials of those family settings.
METHODS
A form of questionnaire was first explored from an initial interview assessment of 10 government-certified hospice care providers and a literature review, second constructed with eight domains and 80 items, and sent by e-mail to 55 institutions and hospitals providing hospice/palliative cares in Korea. Lastly, a total of 31 agencies returned with a completed responses and consent form (56% response rate). SPSS program (version 18.0) was used for data analysis.
RESULTS
Study found that social workers perceived patients' family background (m=4.53, 5-point scale) as the most important assessment domain, whereas economic conditions (4.06 point) the least important. Social workers' perception varied by credentials (i.e., license types, training, full-time position, types of care facility).
CONCLUSION
Based upon study findings, investigators can conclude strong needs for developing a assessment tool that measures multiple domains (i.e., psychological, social and ecological aspects) of patients. A standardized assessment tool should be structured with 2 axis (center/core and expanded/peripheral) and tailored for institution type. Second, professional trainings must be provided by strengthening legal institutionalization and fostering qualified social workers with full responsibilities of hospice and palliative care patients.

Keyword

Self-assessment; Psychology; Social work; Hospice care; Palliative care

MeSH Terms

Axis, Cervical Vertebra
Consent Forms
Electronic Mail
Foster Home Care
Hospice Care
Hospices*
Humans
Institutionalization
Korea
Licensure
Palliative Care*
Psychology
Research Personnel
Self-Assessment
Social Workers*
Statistics as Topic
Surveys and Questionnaires
Full Text Links
  • KJHPC
Actions
Cited
CITED
export Copy
Close
Share
  • Twitter
  • Facebook
Similar articles
Copyright © 2024 by Korean Association of Medical Journal Editors. All rights reserved.     E-mail: koreamed@kamje.or.kr