Last 3 months of life in home-ventilated patients: the family perception.

Eur Respir J

Respiratory Dept, Fondazione Salvatore Maugeri, IRCCS, Via Giuseppe Mazzini 129, 25066 Lumezzane (Brescia), Italy.

Published: May 2010

We studied the family's perception of care in patients under home mechanical ventilation during the last 3 months of life. In 11 respiratory units, we submitted a 35-item questionnaire to relatives of 168 deceased patients exploring six domains: symptoms, awareness of disease, family burden, dying, medical and technical problems. Response rate was 98.8%. The majority of patients complained respiratory symptoms and were aware of the severity and prognosis of the disease. Family burden was high especially in relation to money need. During hospitalisation, 74.4% of patients were admitted to the intensive care unit (ICU). 78 patients died at home, 70 patients in a medical ward and 20 in ICU. 27% of patients received resuscitation manoeuvres. Hospitalisations and family economical burden were unrelated to diagnosis and mechanical ventilation. Families of the patients did not report major technical problems on the use of ventilators. In comparison with mechanical invasively ventilated patients, noninvasively ventilated patients were more aware of prognosis, used more respiratory drugs, changed ventilation time more frequently and died less frequently when under mechanical ventilation. We have presented good points and bad points regarding end-of-life care in home mechanically ventilated patients. Noninvasive ventilation use and diagnosis have impact on this burden.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1183/09031936.00061009DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

patients
12
mechanical ventilation
12
ventilated patients
12
months life
8
disease family
8
family burden
8
technical problems
8
ventilation
5
life home-ventilated
4
home-ventilated patients
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!