Komal Patel Murali

Faculty

Komal Murali headshot

Komal Patel Murali

PhD RN ACNP-BC

1 212 998 5783

433 FIRST AVENUE
NEW YORK, NY 10010
United States

Komal Patel Murali's additional information

Komal Patel Murali, PhD, RN, ACNP-BC, FPCN is an assistant professor at NYU Rory Meyers College of Nursing dedicated to advancing palliative and hospice care for seriously ill persons across care settings. Overall, she aims to illuminate and address the challenges of end-of-life decision-making through improved care delivery, communication, and education surrounding the care of persons with serious illness.
 

Murali is currently supported by the National Institute on Aging (K23AG083125) to develop a care management intervention aimed at reducing disparities in hospice care utilization and improving care transitions at the end of life for persons with dementia and their family caregivers in home healthcare. Another area of her research includes exploring and designing family-centered programs for caregiving support of South Asian older adults with multiple chronic conditions in faith- and community-based settings (P50MD017356). 
 

Prof. Murali holds a BSN and MSN from the University of Pennsylvania School of Nursing and a PhD from NYU Meyers. Drawing directly on a decade of clinical experience as an ICU nurse and nurse practitioner, Prof. Murali has also focused on clinician-informed palliative care integration in the ICU. These foundational nursing experiences shaped Prof. Murali’s scholarship and consistently inform the “why” behind her work. She is dedicated to teaching and mentoring nursing students, clinicians, leaders, and scholars focused on end-of-life care for seriously ill older adults and their families.

 

BSN – University of Pennsylvania (2008)
MSN – University of Pennsylvania (2011)
PhD – New York University (2020)

Critical care
Nursing education
Palliative care
Serious illness
Theoretical and conceptual models

American Association of Critical Care Nurses
Eastern Nursing Research Society
Gerontological Society of America
Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association
Sigma Theta Tau International Nursing Honor Society

Faculty Honors Awards

Fellow in Palliative in Palliative Care Nursing, Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association (2025)
Nessa Coyle Leadership Lecture and Award, Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association (2024)
Research Scholar, Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association (2023)
NYU Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center Research Education Component Scholar (2023)
Emerging Leaders Award, Hospice and Palliative Nurses Foundation (2022)
Distinguished PhD Student Award, NYU Meyers (2020)
President’s Service Award, New York University (2018)
Jonas Nurse Leader Scholar, Jonas Center for Nursing Excellence (2018)
Norman Volk Doctoral Scholarship, NYU Meyers (2018)
HRSA Nurse Corps Loan Repayment Program (2012)
Sigma Theta Tau Inductee, University of Pennsylvania (2008)
Mary D. Naylor Undergraduate Research Award, University of Pennsylvania (2008)
Pennsylvania Higher Education Foundation Scholarship (2008)
Promise of Nursing Regional Scholarship Award, Foundation of the National Student Nurses Association (2008)
Scholar, Center for Health Disparities Research, Penn Nursing (2007)

Publications

An Adapted Conceptual Model Integrating Palliative Care in Serious Illness and Multiple Chronic Conditions

Murali, K. P., Merriman, J. D., Yu, G., Vorderstrasse, A., Kelley, A., & Brody, A. A. (2020). American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine, 37(12), 1086-1095. 10.1177/1049909120928353
Abstract
Abstract
Objective: Seriously ill adults with multiple chronic conditions (MCC) who receive palliative care may benefit from improved symptom burden, health care utilization and cost, caregiver stress, and quality of life. To guide research involving serious illness and MCC, palliative care can be integrated into a conceptual model to develop future research studies to improve care strategies and outcomes in this population. Methods: The adapted conceptual model was developed based on a thorough review of the literature, in which current evidence and conceptual models related to serious illness, MCC, and palliative care were appraised. Factors contributing to patients’ needs, services received, and service-related variables were identified. Relevant patient outcomes and evidence gaps are also highlighted. Results: Fifty-eight articles were synthesized to inform the development of an adapted conceptual model including serious illness, MCC, and palliative care. Concepts were organized into 4 main conceptual groups, including Factors Affecting Needs (sociodemographic and social determinants of health), Factors Affecting Services Received (health system; research, evidence base, dissemination, and health policy; community resources), Service-Related Variables (patient visits, service mix, quality of care, patient information, experience), and Outcomes (symptom burden, quality of life, function, advance care planning, goal-concordant care, utilization, cost, death, site of death, satisfaction). Discussion: The adapted conceptual model integrates palliative care with serious illness and multiple chronic conditions. The model is intended to guide the development of research studies involving seriously ill adults with MCC and aid researchers in addressing relevant evidence gaps.

End of Life Decision-Making: Watson’s Theory of Human Caring

Murali, K. P. (2020). Nursing Science Quarterly, 33(1), 73-78. 10.1177/0894318419881807
Abstract
Abstract
The phenomenon of end-of-life (EOL) decision-making is a lived experience by which individuals or families make decisions about care they will receive prior to death. A postmodern philosophical approach suggests EOL decision-making is a varied contextual phenomenon that is highly influenced by subjectivity. Thus, there is no specific definition for the phenomenon of EOL decision-making. Watson’s theory of human caring complements a postmodern approach in guiding the nursing process of caring for individuals as they experience EOL decision-making.

Service use, participation, experiences, and outcomes among older adult immigrants in american adult day service centers: An integrative review of the literature

Sadarangani, T. R., & Murali, K. P. (2018). Research in Gerontological Nursing, 11(6), 317-328. 10.3928/19404921-20180629-01
Abstract
Abstract
Older adult immigrants are often socially isolated and vulnerable to poor health. Adult day service (ADS) centers could potentially facilitate social integration and address their long-term health care needs. The current review (a) identifies barriers to and facilitators of ADS use among immigrants, (b) explores how ADS programs impact older adult immigrants’ health and well-being, and (c) isolates the most effective culturally based components of ADS programs. An integrative review was conducted using Whittemore and Knafl’s methodology. Four databases were searched. Articles were critically appraised and data were organized within an ADS-specific framework. Functional impairment, race, gender, and degree of loneliness were all predictors of ADS use. ADS enhanced immigrants’ quality of life and provided fulfillment. Transportation, bilingual nurses, peer support, and cultural activities were deemed essential by participants. ADS can provide support to older adult immigrants by adding cultural elements to existing services and using nurses as cultural liaisons. More research is needed to assess the impact of ADS on disease outcomes, including dementia, and on immigrants in multi-ethnic settings.

A Novel Picture Guide to Improve Spiritual Care and Reduce Anxiety in Mechanically Ventilated Adults in the Intensive Care Unit.

Murali, K. (2016). Annals of the American Thoracic Society. 10.1513/annalsats.201512-831oc
Abstract
Abstract
RationaleHospital chaplains provide spiritual care that helps patients facing serious illness cope with their symptoms and prognosis, yet because mechanically ventilated patients cannot speak, spiritual care of these patients has been limited.ObjectivesTo determine the feasibility and measure the effects of chaplain-led picture-guided spiritual care for mechanically ventilated adults in the intensive care unit (ICU).MethodsWe conducted a quasi-experimental study at a tertiary care hospital between March 2014 and July 2015. Fifty mechanically ventilated adults in medical or surgical ICUs without delirium or dementia received spiritual care by a hospital chaplain using an illustrated communication card to assess their spiritual affiliations, emotions, and needs and were followed until hospital discharge. Feasibility was assessed as the proportion of participants able to identify spiritual affiliations, emotions, and needs using the card. Among the first 25 participants, we performed semistructured interviews with 8 ICU survivors to identify how spiritual care helped them. For the subsequent 25 participants, we measured anxiety (on 100-mm visual analog scales [VAS]) immediately before and after the first chaplain visit, and we performed semistructured interviews with 18 ICU survivors with added measurements of pain and stress (on ±100-mm VAS).Measurements and main resultsThe mean (SD) age was 59 (±16) years, median mechanical ventilation days was 19.5 (interquartile range, 7-29 d), and 15 (30%) died in-hospital. Using the card, 50 (100%) identified a spiritual affiliation, 47 (94%) identified one or more emotions, 45 (90%) rated their spiritual pain, and 36 (72%) selected a chaplain intervention. Anxiety after the first visit decreased 31% (mean score change, -20; 95% confidence interval, -33 to -7). Among 28 ICU survivors, 26 (93%) remembered the intervention and underwent semistructured interviews, of whom 81% felt more capable of dealing with their hospitalization and 0% felt worse. The 18 ICU survivors who underwent additional VAS testing during semistructured follow-up interviews reported a 49-point reduction in stress (95% confidence interval, -72 to -24) and no significant change in physical pain that they attributed to picture-guided spiritual care.ConclusionsChaplain-led picture-guided spiritual care is feasible among mechanically ventilated adults and shows potential for reducing anxiety during and stress after an ICU admission.

The implementation of an early rehabilitation program is associated with reduced length of stay: A multi-ICU study.

Murali, K. (2015). Journal of the Intensive Care Society. 10.1177/1751143715605118
Abstract
Abstract
IntroductionSurvivors of critical illness face many potential long-term sequelae. Prior studies showed that early rehabilitation in the intensive care unit (ICU) reduces physical impairment and decreases ICU and hospital length of stay (LOS). However, these studies are based on a single ICU or were conducted with a small subset of all ICU patients. We examined the effect of an early rehabilitation program concurrently implemented in multiple ICUs on ICU and hospital LOS.MethodsAn early rehabilitation program was systematically implemented in five ICUs at the sites of two affiliated academic institutions. We retrospectively compared ICU and hospital LOS in the year before (1/2011-12/2011) and after (1/2012-12/2012) implementation.ResultsIn the pre- and post-implementation periods, respectively, there were a total of 3945 and 4200 ICU admissions among the five ICUs. After implementation, there was a significant increase in the proportion of patients who received more rehabilitation treatments during their ICU stay (p p p p ConclusionsA multi-ICU, coordinated implementation of an early rehabilitation program markedly increased rehabilitation treatments in the ICU and was associated with reduced ICU and hospital LOS as well as increased ICU admissions.

Media