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Palliative medicine in the intensive care unit: needs, delivery, quality

Authors :
Stephanie A Hill
Fliss E M Murtagh
Abdul Dawood
Elaine G. Boland
Hannah E Leahy
Source :
BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care. 12:38-41
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
BMJ, 2021.

Abstract

Background15%–20% of critical care patients die during their hospital admission. This service evaluation assesses quality of palliative care in intensive care units (ICUs) compared with national standards.MethodsRetrospective review of records for all patients who died in four ICUs (irrespective of treatment limitation) between 1 June and 31 July 2019. Descriptive statistics reported for patient characteristics, length of stay, admission route, identification triggers and palliative care delivery.ResultsForty-five patients died, two records were untraced, thus N=43. The dying process was recognised in 88% (n=38). Among those where dying was recognised (N=35), 97% (34) had documented family discussion before death, 9% (3) were offered religious/spiritual support, 11% (4) had review of hydration/nutrition and 6% (2) had documented preferred place of death. Prescription of symptom control medications was complete in 71% (25) opioids, 34% (12) haloperidol, 54% (19) midazolam and 43% (15) hyoscine. Combining five triggers—length of stay >10 days prior to ICU admission 7% (3), multiorgan failure ≥3 systems 33% (14), stage IV malignancy 5% (2), post-cardiac arrest 23% (10) and intracerebral haemorrhage requiring mechanical ventilation 12% (5)—identified 60% (26) of patients. Referral to the palliative care team was seen in 14% (5), and 8% (3) had specialist palliative care team review.ConclusionsRecognition of dying was high but occurred close to death. Family discussions were frequent, but religious/spiritual needs, hydration/nutrition and anticipatory medications were less often considered. The ICUs delivered their own palliative care in conjunction with specialist palliative care input. Combining five triggers could increase identification of palliative care needs, but a larger study is needed.

Details

ISSN :
20454368 and 2045435X
Volume :
12
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....622cb2e4240af5df8a7bb790d06d094e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjspcare-2020-002795