Paediatric palliative care in the NICU : a new era of integration

Article indépendant

BERTAUD, Sophie | MONTGOMERY, Angela M. | CRAIG, Finella

We are entering a new era of integration between neonatal medicine and paediatric palliative care, with increasing recognition that the role and skills of palliative care extend beyond care of only the terminally ill infant. This paper addresses the principles of paediatric palliative care and how they apply in the NICU, considers who provides palliative care in this setting and outlines the key components of care. We consider how the international standards of palliative care pertain to neonatal medicine and how a fully integrated approach to care may be realised across these two disciplines. Palliative care is so much more than end-of-life care, offering a proactive and holistic approach which addresses the physical, emotional, spiritual and social needs of the infant and family. This is a truly interdisciplinary endeavour, relying on a harmonisation of the skills from both the neonatal and palliative care teams to deliver high-quality coordinated care.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.siny.2023.101436

Voir la revue «Seminars in fetal and neonatal medicine, 28»

Autres numéros de la revue «Seminars in fetal and neonatal medicine»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Paediatric palliative care in the NICU : a ne...

Article indépendant | BERTAUD, Sophie | Seminars in fetal and neonatal medicine | n°3 | vol.28

We are entering a new era of integration between neonatal medicine and paediatric palliative care, with increasing recognition that the role and skills of palliative care extend beyond care of only the terminally ill infant. This ...

Perceptions of neonatal palliative care : sim...

Article | KYC, Stephanie J. | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°5 | vol.23

Background: A significant number of newborns are affected by life-limiting or life-threatening conditions. Despite this prevalence, there are inconsistencies in attitudes toward, and delivery of, neonatal palliative care. Implemen...

Perceptions of neonatal palliative care : sim...

Article indépendant | KYC, Stephanie J. | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°5 | vol.23

Background: A significant number of newborns are affected by life-limiting or life-threatening conditions. Despite this prevalence, there are inconsistencies in attitudes toward, and delivery of, neonatal palliative care. Implemen...

De la même série

Paediatric palliative care in the NICU : a ne...

Article indépendant | BERTAUD, Sophie | Seminars in fetal and neonatal medicine | n°3 | vol.28

We are entering a new era of integration between neonatal medicine and paediatric palliative care, with increasing recognition that the role and skills of palliative care extend beyond care of only the terminally ill infant. This ...

Ethics at the end of life in the newborn inte...

Article indépendant | MERCURIO, Mark R. | Seminars in fetal and neonatal medicine | n°3 | vol.28

The unexpected birth of a critically ill baby raises many ethical questions for neonatologists. Some of these are obviously ethical questions, about whether to attempt resuscitation, and, if the baby is resuscitated and survives, ...

Neonatal euthanasia in the context of palliat...

Article indépendant | VERHAGEN, A. A. Eduard | Seminars in fetal and neonatal medicine | n°3 | vol.28

Neonatal deaths can be categorized in 5 modes along the dimension of intervention and physiology. This classification can be helpful to analyze the choices that can be made in end-of-life care in the NICU. In the Netherlands, neon...

Pain and distress management in palliative ne...

Article indépendant | GARTEN, Lars | Seminars in fetal and neonatal medicine

Palliative care concentrates on preventing and relieving suffering by reducing the severity of disease symptoms. Consistent treatment of pain and distress must therefore be an integral component of every palliative care concept. I...

Palliative care for NICU survivors with chron...

Article indépendant | BOSS, Renee D. | Seminars in fetal and neonatal medicine

The sickest of NICU survivors develop chronic critical illness (CCI). Most infants with CCI will leave the NICU using chronic medical technology and will experience repeated rehospitalizations. The unique issues for these NICU gra...

Chargement des enrichissements...