Hospice/palliative care is not just end-of-life care, it is specialised medical care for patients with serious illness.1 Although definitions of “serious illness” may vary, it is clear that far more patients could benefit from hospice/palliative care than we can actually serve, given the existing workforce challenges and the lack of clarity in how to pay for specialist palliative care throughout the world. The needs of patients and caregivers are similar regardless of the underlying life limiting illness.24

Appropriate timing of referrals is key, but this timing must be clearly defined for each disease group, with differences to be expected between cancer and COPD.5 Not every patient needs to see a palliative care specialist, and the timing matters greatly when resources are limited.6 Thus, as palliative care continues to move further upstream in a patient's journey, these limitations necessitate that we be better able to match the right type of care with the right patient at the right time. Models of “care coordination” offer one potentially promising strategy for addressing this problem.

In this issue of the PCRJ, Epiphaniou and colleagues7 report the results of a longitudinal qualitative study of patients' experiences with end-of-life care coordination in the UK. These results highlight several important truths about the current state of care coordination. First, patients with COPD had little access to care coordinators (or “keyworkers” as they are called here). These patients are at risk for increasingly frequent re-hospitalisations as the disease progresses, and avoiding hospital is a crucial way of improving care and decreasing healthcare costs. Given the very long illness trajectory for people with COPD,8 they may seem less in need of care coordination, and are often left without easy access to close follow-up care after hospital discharge. Patients with COPD in this study expressed a sense of feeling left out on their own without much support.

Patients with lung cancer, on the other hand, routinely had access to a care coordinator.7 Among those who did, nearly all felt it was valuable. These findings highlight the remarkably positive role care coordinators can play in the life of a patient with serious illness. Patients frequently described how useful the coordinator was in responding to their needs by matching them with various services, and helping them contact their physicians. The complex care needed for those with advanced illness can be very overwhelming and patients may need a “disease shepherd” to help show them the way.

These key concepts of care coordination are central to the care that is provided by hospice/palliative care services around the world. Such care might be expected to result in fewer emergency department visits or hospital stays for patients with serious, progressive illnesses. Interestingly, despite its intuitive appeal, care coordination actually does not always result in improved outcomes. In fact, published studies have been somewhat mixed. For example, a similar concept was tested in the US cancer setting, using “nurse navigators.”9 In a randomised controlled trial, this intervention yielded improvements in psychosocial care, care coordination, and patient information, but actually did not improve quality of life. It also did not reduce costs, except in a subset with lung cancer. Similarly, in a large randomised trial of a tele-health intervention for patients with COPD,10 a daily symptom and medication monitoring approach was not effective in reducing re-hospitalisations or improving quality of life. Though slightly different from care coordinators, this finding puts forward the challenge of how best to apply findings from the study by Epiphaniou et al.7 to populations of people with COPD.

Another noteworthy study of care coordination is the “Palliative Care Trial.”11,12 Here, the implementation of a single patient-focused case conference, coordinated by a palliative care nurse in concert with the general practitioner (GP), was shown to reduce hospitalisations by 26% and to provide better maintenance of performance status. The nurse and GP assessed the patient's needs and translated these to the multidisciplinary case conference, bringing the patient's voice to the plan of care. This approach embodies the “disease shepherd” model by helping match the right support services to the right patient in a timely way. Referrals and use of scarce resources are thus based on need, rather than diagnosis or prognosis. As so conceived, a care coordinator may be the very steward that we need to judiciously expand palliative care services to those patients who are particularly likely to need and/or benefit from accessing them.

In heart failure, a nurse-led intervention comprising comprehensive education, social-service consultation, and intensive follow-up reduced 90-day heart failure readmission by 56.2%, improved quality of life, and reduced the cost of care.13 A meta-analysis of published trials of post-discharge support strategies further supports these findings.14 In contrast, enhanced access to primary care for heart failure patients did not improve their self-reported health status and was actually associated with more frequent hospitalisation.15 Reconciling these findings will be important in moving science forward in this area.

In the end, what do these somewhat contradictory results mean for hospice/palliative care, and for clinicians who face the difficult decision about timing a referral or who are trying to adopt a model of care coordination? Wherein lies the “transition point” — the “Goldilocks point” — where it is exactly the right time to mobilise specialist hospice/palliative care services for the patient sub-group who will derive the most benefit? Whilst we do not pretend to have all the answers, we do propose a path forward in terms of further research. More work is needed to explore the role of functional limitations, the onset of troublesome symptoms, or both, as a potentially useful threshold to trigger further care coordination. The onset of functional decline often portends a poor prognosis, especially in cancer settings,16 and symptoms often signal an impending need for emergency or inpatient services. Symptoms can now be monitored in the home using emerging technological applications,17 and once decline is noted, care coordination could be mobilised to assess the potential need for additional services. More active use of mobile health technology solutions is likely to play an important role in solving this puzzle, helping us match the right care to the right patient at the right time. Care coordinators will not fix all of palliative care's service planning problems, but are a key part of the solution if appropriately applied. Regardless, further study is needed not only on their impact on patients, but also on patients' caregivers.