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A one-day, hospital-wide survey of dying inpatients
- Source :
- Journal of palliative medicine. 5(3)
- Publication Year :
- 2002
-
Abstract
- We attempted to identify and briefly follow until discharge all terminally ill patients in a large general hospital. On 1 day, nurse case managers reviewed all hospitalized patients and identified those whom they believed were likely to die in the next 6 months (Category A) or whom might be considered terminally ill but with a longer prognosis (Category B). Twelve percent of all adult and pediatric medical-surgical inpatients were detected, equally divided between the two categories. In Category A, 63% were on the medical service, 7% were receiving intensive care, 54% had cancer, and 46% had do-not-resuscitate (DNR) orders. In Category B, 40% were on the medical service, 10% were in intensive care, 52% had cancer, and only 5% had DNR orders. Case managers expected 6% of identified patients to die in the hospital. After 1 month, at least 19% of identified patients had died (2.3% of the medical-surgical inpatient census on the day of the survey). The average length of stay in both categories, excluding outliers, was 24 days or approximately 4 times the average length of stay for the hospital. Patients who actually died in the hospital had an average length of stay of 62 days. This study presents a simple method for estimating the number of dying patients in a hospital--the target population for a palliative care program--and for determining their location, principal diagnosis, length of stay, and disposition. We present information indicating that the survey underestimates the number of dying hospitalized patients. We discuss possible policy implication of this study, primarily that general hospitals should consider developing specialized palliative care services for this substantial group of inpatients.
- Subjects :
- Pediatrics
medicine.medical_specialty
Inpatients
Time Factors
business.industry
Hospitalized patients
DNR orders
Palliative Care
Terminally ill
General Medicine
Length of Stay
Prognosis
Patient Discharge
Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine
Intensive care
medicine
Humans
Terminally Ill
Day hospital
Hospital Mortality
General hospital
business
Case Management
General Nursing
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 10966218
- Volume :
- 5
- Issue :
- 3
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Journal of palliative medicine
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....b9ff95212c123762ae7aad2aef03dd67