Outpatient Pediatric Palliative Care: A National Survey of Clinic Structures and Operations

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

8-20-2025

Publication Title

Journal of Pain and Symptom Management

Abstract

Context: Inpatient pediatric palliative care (PPC) programs are increasingly expanding into the outpatient setting; however, limited information is available to guide clinic operationalization. Objectives: We asked outpatient PPC (OPPC) clinicians about their clinic structure and operations to support future programmatic growth. Methods: In 2019, national palliative care organizations reported 48 freestanding children's hospitals with specialty PPC programs. As part of a larger study on OPPC services, a PPC liaison at each hospital was asked to complete an online survey regarding clinic operations and metrics of success. Results: Out of 36 respondents, 28 (78%) reported provision of OPPC in a clinic setting. Most OPPC clinics were located within another subspecialty clinic and managed by PPC (64%) and/or non-PPC subspecialty staff (54%). Respondents reported utilizing various clinic models including floating (62%), freestanding (50%), and/or embedded (39%), with more than half (58%) using more than one model. Fifty percent of PPC clinicians restricted their schedule to specific half day clinics, offering a median of 2.5 half day clinics per week. OPPC clinic schedules typically consisted of two 60-minute initial consultations and one to five 30- to 60-minute follow-up appointments per week. Most respondents self-reported that their OPPC program design and workflow facilitated the provision of high-quality care; however, only half of respondents felt their program design and workflow was successful and promoted team resilience. Conclusion: Hospital-based OPPC clinic operationalization varies significantly across the nation, with many programs utilizing more than one clinic model simultaneously. It remains unclear how various clinic structures and workflow practices influence OPPC program sustainability and success.

PubMed ID

40846231

Volume

70

Issue

5

Publisher

Elsevier

Rights

© 2025 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine.

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