Patients with hematologic malignancies (HMs) receive more disease directed care at the end of life (EOL) and often die in the hospital. The impact of early palliative care (PC) consultation on EOL quality outcomes in HMs has not been well described. In 2017 we embedded a PC specialist within our inpatient malignant hematology team at our hospital in Providence, Rhode Island to facilitate the use of early PC. We sought to determine if this practice was accompanied by a shift in EOL outcomes. We conducted a retrospective review of patients diagnosed with acute myeloid leukemia (AML) at our institution in the two years before (Cohort A) and after (Cohort B) insertion of a PC specialist. We identified patients who received a PC consultation and whether it was early or late. We then examined EOL quality outcomes: hospitalizations and intensive care unit (ICU) admissions in the last 30 days of life, chemotherapy use in the last 14 days of life, use of hospice, and death out of hospital. Among 139 AML patients, 46 in Cohort A and 93 in Cohort B, we identified 34 and 47 decedents in each cohort, respectively. There was no significant improvement in EOL outcomes between Cohort A and B or among patients receiving early PC ( > 0.05); however, PC in general across all cohorts was associated with significant increase in hospice use and fewer ICU admissions ( = 0.016 and 0.0043, respectively). Earlier PC consultation in AML was not significantly associated with improvement in EOL quality outcomes; however, PC use in general was with improvement in use of hospice and ICU utilization. Further studies are needed to more definitively examine the relationship between early PC and EOL outcomes in patients with HMs and to examine non EOL outcomes such as patient experience and quality-of-life measures.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2021.0193 | DOI Listing |
Emerg Med J
December 2024
Emergency Medicine, Cork University Hospital, Cork, Ireland.
Background: Patients with end-of-life care (EoLC) needs present to the emergency departments (ED) frequently and at times, it can be difficult to provide a high standard of care. Within the Irish setting, there is limited literature on the provision of EoLC in EDs and this study, therefore, aimed to evaluate the perceptions of emergency medicine (EM) clinicians regarding the provision of EoLC in EDs in Ireland.
Methods: The End-of-Life Care in Emergency Department Study was a cross-sectional electronic survey study of EM doctors working across 23 of the 29 EDs in the Ireland.
Health Commun
December 2024
School of Foreign Languages, Hunan University of Chinese Medicine.
Palliative care family meetings (PCFMs) can be conceivably endorsed as helpful means for bettering end of life (EOL) communication with terminally ill patients and their families. Relevant scholarship in China remains emerging and youthful, with many avenues left to explore. Few studies have delineated the structure and specified the strategies for conducting PCFMs in the Chinese context.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Pain Symptom Manage
December 2024
Division of Hematology-Oncology (W.C.C., S.T.T.), Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Linkou, Tao-Yuan, Taiwan, R.O.C.;; School of Nursing, Medical College (S.T.T.), Chang Gung University, Tao-Yuan, Taiwan, R.O.C.; Department of Nursing (S.T.T.), Chang Gung University of Science and Technology, Tao-Yuan, Taiwan, R.O.C.. Electronic address:
Context: Health-related quality of life (HRQOL) is highly endorsed, but HRQOL studies scarcely investigate the following: ICU family members; modifiable end-of-life (EOL) ICU-care factors; conjoint associations with prolonged grief disorder (PGD), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and depression; and long-term bereavement outcomes.
Objectives: Exploratorily investigate associations of PGD-PTSD-depressive-symptom states (resilient, subthreshold-depression dominant, PGD dominant, and PGD-PTSD-depression comorbid) and quality of EOL ICU care with families' HRQOL 6-24 months post loss.
Methods: This cohort study examined symptoms of PGD (11 items of the PG-13), PTSD (Impact of Event Scale-Revised), and depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale), and HRQOL (Medical Outcomes Study 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey) among 303 ICU family members.
Hematology Am Soc Hematol Educ Program
December 2024
Institute for Cancer Outcomes and Survivorship, University of Alabama at Birmingham, Birmingham, AL.
End-of-life (EOL) care is a critical part of sickle cell disease (SCD) management. However, barriers to high-quality EOL care remain, including (1) disease-related barriers (prior opioid exposure, risk of vaso-occlusive crises, chronic conditions with conflicting needs, and limitations of receiving disease-directed therapy on hospice); (2) communication-related barriers (challenges of identifying and responding to religious and spiritual concerns, limited health literacy, and previous health care system experience); (3) systemic issues (social determinants of health, structural racism, and mistrust of the medical system). However, palliative care and interdisciplinary collaboration can overcome many of these barriers.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMJ Open
December 2024
Department of Intensive Care Medicine, Chi Mei Medical Center, Tainan, Taiwan
Introduction: With advances in medicine and the resultant increased ageing population, dementia, including Alzheimer's disease, has become a leading cause of death in individuals aged over 65 years in nursing homes. The unpredictable trajectory of the disease, marked by cognitive and functional decline, necessitates intensive healthcare and poses challenges to end-of-life (EoL) care decisions, particularly because majority of the affected individuals become unable to make their own decisions. This highlights the importance of advance care planning (ACP) programmes that enable individuals with dementia to define and communicate their EoL care decisions in advance.
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