Location of death and end-of-life characteristics of young adults with cancer treated at a pediatric hospital

Article indépendant

SAN JULIAN MARK, Melissa | YANG, Gang | DING, Lili | NORRIS, Robin E. | THIENPRAYOON, Rachel

Background: Location of death (LOD) is an important aspect of end-of-life (EOL) care. Adolescents and young adults (YAs) with pediatric malignancies are increasingly treated in pediatric institutions. YAs, generally defined as 18-39 years old, deserve specific attention because adults have unique developmental and social considerations compared with younger patients. Objective: The goal of this retrospective cohort study was to understand the effect of treatment by a pediatric oncology program on EOL experiences for YAs. Specifically, we examined LOD, hospice, and palliative care (PC) involvement in a cohort of YAs who died of cancer in a large, quaternary care pediatric hospital. Methods: This was a retrospective cohort study of patients >= 18 years of age, who died of cancer between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2017. Standardized data were abstracted from the institutional cancer registry and the electronic medical record. Results: YAs in this cohort more commonly died in the hospital (54.9%). Lack of hospice involvement and the presence of a documented do-not-resuscitate (DNR) order were significantly associated with inpatient death. The majority of patients had long-standing PC involvement (95.8%, median 318 days), a DNR order (78.9%), and had enrolled in hospice care (60.6%) before death. Conclusions: These results suggest that a significant proportion of YAs with cancer remain inpatient for EOL care. Pediatric oncologists and PC teams may benefit from additional training in the unique psychosocial needs of YAs to optimize EOL care for these older patients.

https://www.liebertpub.com/doi/pdf/10.1089/jayao.2018.0123

Voir la revue «Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Location of death and end-of-life characteris...

Article | SAN JULIAN MARK, Melissa | Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology

Background: Location of death (LOD) is an important aspect of end-of-life (EOL) care. Adolescents and young adults (YAs) with pediatric malignancies are increasingly treated in pediatric institutions. YAs, generally defined as 18-...

Location of death and end-of-life characteris...

Article indépendant | SAN JULIAN MARK, Melissa | Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology

Background: Location of death (LOD) is an important aspect of end-of-life (EOL) care. Adolescents and young adults (YAs) with pediatric malignancies are increasingly treated in pediatric institutions. YAs, generally defined as 18-...

Provider-prioritized domains of quality in pe...

Article indépendant | THIENPRAYOON, Rachel | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°3 | vol.21

BACKGROUND: Children receiving hospice and palliative care (HPC) differ from adults in important ways. Children are more likely to have rare diagnoses, less likely to have cancer, have longer lengths of stay on hospice, and are mo...

De la même série

Remembering friends : exploring the bereaveme...

Article indépendant | MACKLAND, Anna E. | Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology | n°2 | vol.11

Introduction: Bereavement is often difficult for adolescents to cope with particularly when the death experienced is a friend due to cancer, while the young person is undergoing their own cancer treatment. There is limited researc...

Educational needs of health professionals car...

Article indépendant | BRADFORD, Natalie K. | Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology

BACKGROUND: Young people with cancer have distinct clinical and psychosocial needs during and after cancer treatment. However, as adolescent and young adult (AYA) cancer is rare, and only recently recognized as specialty, health p...

Location of death and end-of-life characteris...

Article indépendant | SAN JULIAN MARK, Melissa | Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology

Background: Location of death (LOD) is an important aspect of end-of-life (EOL) care. Adolescents and young adults (YAs) with pediatric malignancies are increasingly treated in pediatric institutions. YAs, generally defined as 18-...

A comparison of young adults with and without...

Article indépendant | MOONEY-DOYLE, Kim | Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology

Purpose: Concurrent hospice care provides important end-of-life care for youth under 21 years. Those nearing 21 years must decide whether to shift to adult hospice or leave hospice for life-prolonging care. This decision may be ch...

Evaluating palliative opportunities across th...

Article indépendant | LABUDDE, Emily J. | Journal of adolescent and young adult oncology

Purpose: Adolescent patients with cancer experience unique stressors due to their developmental stage, with increased physical, emotional, and social distress. Palliative care (PC) serves an important role in pediatric cancer care...

Chargement des enrichissements...