AI Article Synopsis

  • Early integration of palliative care for terminally ill non-cancer patients enhances quality of life, yet research on its application is limited.
  • A 9-year study analyzed data from Taichung Veterans General Hospital focusing on non-cancer patients receiving Palliative Care Consultation Service (PCCS), highlighting trends in diagnoses, patient outcomes, and Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) declarations.
  • Results showed significant differences in demographics, disease awareness, and outcomes linked to various diagnoses, with organic brain disease and chronic kidney disease being the most common among patients; moreover, a high percentage consistently opted for DNR consent early in the study.
  • The findings advocate for the importance of integrating PCCS into standard care for non-cancer patients to improve

Article Abstract

Backgrounds: Early integration of palliative care for terminally ill non-cancer patients improves quality of life. However, there are scanty data on Palliative Care Consultation Service (PCCS) among non-cancer patients.

Methods: In this 9-year observational study Data were collected from the Hospice-Palliative Clinical Database (HPCD) of Taichung Veterans General Hospital (TCVGH). Terminally ill non-cancer patients with 9 categories of diagnoses who received PCCS during 2011 to 2019 were enrolled. Trend analysis was performed to evaluate differences in categories of diagnosis throughout study period, duration of PCCS, patient outcomes, DNR declaration, awareness of disease by patients and families before and after PCCS.

Results: In total, 536 non-cancer patients received PCCS from 2011 to 2019 with an average age of 70.7 years. The average duration of PCCS was 18.4 days. The distributions of age, gender, patient outcomes, family's awareness of disease before PCCS, and patient's awareness of disease after PCCS were significantly different among the diagnoses. Organic brain disease and Chronic kidney disease (CKD) were the most prevalent diagnoses in patients receiving PCCS in 2019. For DNR declaration, the percentage of patients signing DNR before PCCS remained high throughout the study period (92.8% in 2019). Patient outcomes varied according to the disease diagnoses.

Conclusion: This 9-year observational study showed that the trend of PCCS among non-cancer patients had changed over the duration of the study. An increasing number of terminally ill non-cancer patients received PCCS during late life, thereby increasing the awareness of disease for both patients and families, which would tend to better prepare terminally ill patients for end-of-life as they may consider DNR consent. Early integration of PCCS into ordinary care for terminally non-cancer patients is essential for better quality of life.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8614035PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12904-021-00879-zDOI Listing

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