Caring for Patients in Need of Palliative Care: Is This a Mission for Acute Care Hospitals? Key Questions for Healthcare Professionals
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
Search Strategy
3. Results
3.1. Who Are People with Serious Chronic Diseases?
3.1.1. Chronic Diseases
3.1.2. Chronic Disease-Focused Discussion
3.2. Why People with Serious Chronic Diseases Were Admitted in Acute Care Hospitals?
3.3. When People with Serious Chronic Diseases Should Be Considered Palliative Care Patients?
3.4. How Acute Care Hospital Should Plan the Work of Caring for This Palliative Care Population?
4. Limitations of the Study
5. Future Directions for Palliative Care Research
5.1. Research
5.2. Interventions
5.3. Education
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statements
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Keyword | Question | Comments |
---|---|---|
Chronic diseases | Who are people with serious chronic diseases? |
|
Unplanned hospital admission | Why people with serious chronic diseases were admitted in acute care hospitals? |
|
Palliative care patient | When people with serious chronic diseases should be considered PC patients? |
|
Hospital care | How acute care hospital should plan the work of caring for this PC population? |
|
Heart failure | NYHA class IV ≥1 admission within the last 6 months Hypotension and/or fluid retention Dependency from intravenous medications Poor response to cardiac resynchronization therapy Cachexia | Dementia | Unable to walk without assistance, urinary and fecal incontinence, no consistently meaningful conversation Considerable assistance required Urinary tract infection, pressures sores (stage 3–4), recurrent fever Reduced oral intake, cachexia, aspiration pneumonia |
Respiratory failure | >70 years Forced Expiratory Volume in the first sec <30% predicted Dyspnea scale grade of ≥3/Dependency from oxygen use ≥1 admission within the last 12 months Cachexia Considerable assistance required | Stroke | NIH Stroke Score ≥20 for left and ≥15 for right stroke Onset of headache + nausea/vomiting within 6 hCT scan showing a middle cerebral artery stroke ≥50% >75 years, history of ictus, fever, atrial fibrillation Conjugate deviation of the eyes Early reduced level of consciousness |
Liver failure | Reduced oral intake, cachexia, aspiration pneumonia Deemed ineligible for transplantation Model for end-stage liver disease (MELD) score >25 Refractory ascites, spontaneous peritonitis, recurrent variceal bleeding, hepatorenal syndrome, hepatic encephalopathy | Parkinson’s disease | Decreasing response to treatments/medications Considerable assistance required Less controlled disease (increasing ‘off’ periods) Dyskinesias, mobility problems, falls Dysphagia (moderate/severe), psychiatric signs |
Renal failure | >75 years Advanced cancer, heart or lung failure, vegetative state, dementia, cachexia | Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis | Patient/family requests for information/help about disease/symptoms Pain requiring high dosages of analgesics Need for a feeding tube Dyspnea or hypoventilation with vital capacity <50% Loss of function in at least two body regions Communication difficulties Weakness Cognitive difficulties Recurrent infections Dysphagia, cachexia, aspiration pneumonia |
Cancer | Uncontrolled symptoms Moderate-to-severe cancer-related distress Metastatic solid tumors, central nervous system metastasis ECOG ≥3 or Karnofsky Performance Status <50 Persistent hypercalcemia, delirium, superior vena cava syndrome, spinal cord compression Cachexia Malignant effusions Palliative stenting or venting gastrostomy Patient/family concerns about disease/decision-making Patient/family requests for palliative care |
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Cotogni, P.; De Luca, A. Caring for Patients in Need of Palliative Care: Is This a Mission for Acute Care Hospitals? Key Questions for Healthcare Professionals. Healthcare 2022, 10, 486. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10030486
Cotogni P, De Luca A. Caring for Patients in Need of Palliative Care: Is This a Mission for Acute Care Hospitals? Key Questions for Healthcare Professionals. Healthcare. 2022; 10(3):486. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10030486
Chicago/Turabian StyleCotogni, Paolo, and Anna De Luca. 2022. "Caring for Patients in Need of Palliative Care: Is This a Mission for Acute Care Hospitals? Key Questions for Healthcare Professionals" Healthcare 10, no. 3: 486. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10030486
APA StyleCotogni, P., & De Luca, A. (2022). Caring for Patients in Need of Palliative Care: Is This a Mission for Acute Care Hospitals? Key Questions for Healthcare Professionals. Healthcare, 10(3), 486. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare10030486