Use of palliative care consultation services for infants with life-threatening conditions in a metropolitan hospital

Article indépendant

MCLAUGHLIN, S. Nicole | SONG, Mi-Kyung | HERTZBERG, Vicki | PIAZZA, Anthony J.

Background: Palliative care is becoming an important component for infants with life-limiting or life-threatening conditions and their families. Yet palliative care practices appear to be inconsistent and sporadically used for infants. Purpose: The purpose of this study was to describe the use of an established pediatric palliative care team for seriously ill infants in a metropolitan hospital. Methods: This was a retrospective medical record review. Findings: The population included 64 infants who were admitted to a level IV neonatal intensive care unit (NICU) and then died during hospitalization between January 2015 and December 2016. Most infants died in an ICU (n = 63, 95%), and only 20 infants (31%) received palliative care consultation. Most common reasons for consultation were care coordination, defining goals of care and end-of-life planning, and symptom management. Implications for Practice: Palliative care consultation at this institution did not change the course of end-of-life care. Interventions provided by the ICU team to infants surrounding end of life were similar to those in infants receiving palliative care services from the specialists. Our findings may be useful for developing guidelines regarding how to best utilize palliative care services for infants with life-threatening conditions who are admitted to an ICU. Implications for Research: These finding support continued research in neonatal palliative care, more specifically the impact of palliative care guidelines and algorithms.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/ANC.0000000000000698

Voir la revue «Advances in neonatal care, 20»

Autres numéros de la revue «Advances in neonatal care»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Subject recruitment and retention against qua...

Article indépendant | SHIELDS, Anne-Marie | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°5 | vol.12

Les études de soins en fin de vie font face à des difficultés associées au recrutement et l'usure de l'échantillon. Les auteurs analysent donc les données sur le recrutement et les efforts de maintien utilisées dans un essai clini...

Subject recruitment and retention against qua...

Article indépendant | SHIELDS, Anne-Marie | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°5 | vol.12

Les études de soins en fin de vie font face à des difficultés associées au recrutement et l'usure de l'échantillon. Les auteurs analysent donc les données sur le recrutement et les efforts de maintien utilisées dans un essai clini...

Palliative nursing summit : nurses leading ch...

Article | HEAD, Barbara Anderson | JOURNAL OF HOSPICE AND PALLIATIVE NURSING | n°1 | vol.20

Advance care planning (ACP) is an essential component of quality palliative care that requires expert communication skills. Nurses are often the health care provider patients and families rely on when exploring their values and pr...

De la même série

Use of palliative care consultation services ...

Article indépendant | MCLAUGHLIN, S. Nicole | Advances in neonatal care | n°2 | vol.20

Background: Palliative care is becoming an important component for infants with life-limiting or life-threatening conditions and their families. Yet palliative care practices appear to be inconsistent and sporadically used for inf...

Conceptually redefining neonatal palliative c...

Article indépendant | KAIN, Victoria J. | Advances in neonatal care | n°3 | vol.20

BACKGROUND: First defined in 2002 by Catlin and Carter, neonatal palliative care (NPC) is a relatively new model of care in neonatal pediatrics, first appearing in the medical literature in the early 1980s. PURPOSE: The purpose of...

Close to home : perinatal palliative care in ...

Article indépendant | ZIEGLER, Tammy Ruiz | Advances in neonatal care | n°3 | vol.20

BACKGROUND: Advances in prenatal testing and diagnosis have resulted in more parents learning during pregnancy that their child may die before or shortly after birth. These advances in testing and diagnosis have also resulted in m...

Women and infants in the deep South receiving...

Article indépendant | DAVIS, Sara L. | Advances in neonatal care

BACKGROUND: While women in the Deep South area of the United States have higher rates of maternal and infant mortality, palliative and supportive care programs are lacking. Additionally, few studies have detailed referral triggers...

Palliative care in the neonatal intensive car...

Article indépendant | LENINGTON, Kathryn | Advances in neonatal care

BACKGROUND: Although the concepts of uncertainty and anticipated loss have been explored in a variety of contexts, advances in genetic testing and life-sustaining technology rendered changes in the care of medically complex infant...

Chargement des enrichissements...