Timing of palliative consultation for children during a fatal illness

Article indépendant

ROSSFELD, Zachary M. | MILLER, Rebecca | FOSSELMAN, David D. | KETNER, Adam R. | TUMIN, Dmitry | TOBIAS, Joseph D. | HUMPHREY, Lisa

BACKGROUND: The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends palliative care for children at the diagnosis of serious illness. Yet few children who die receive specialty palliative care consultation, and when it is provided, palliative care consultation tends to occur after >75% of the time from diagnosis until death. Focusing on the timing of palliative consultation in relation to the date of diagnosis, we evaluated factors predicting earlier receipt of pediatric palliative care in a cohort of decedents. METHODS: We retrospectively identified patients diagnosed with a life-limiting disease who died at our hospital in 2015-2017 after at least 1 inpatient palliative medicine consultation. Our primary outcome was time from palliative-qualifying diagnosis to earliest receipt of specialty palliative care. A survival analysis was used to describe factors associated with earlier receipt of palliative care. RESULTS: The analysis included 180 patients (median age at diagnosis <1 month [interquartile range (IQR): 0-77]). The median time to first palliative consultation was 7 days after diagnosis (IQR: 2-63), compared with a median of 50 days between diagnosis and death (IQR: 7-210). On the multivariable analysis, palliative consultation occurred earlier for patients who had cardiovascular diagnoses, had private insurance, and were of African American race. CONCLUSIONS: In a cohort of decedents at our institution, palliative consultation occurred much earlier than has been previously reported. We also identify factors associated with delayed receipt of palliative care among children who are dying that reveal further opportunities to improve access to specialty palliative care.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/hpeds.2018-0169

Voir la revue «Hospital pediatrics, 9»

Autres numéros de la revue «Hospital pediatrics»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Timing of palliative consultation for childre...

Article indépendant | ROSSFELD, Zachary M. | Hospital pediatrics | n°5 | vol.9

BACKGROUND: The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends palliative care for children at the diagnosis of serious illness. Yet few children who die receive specialty palliative care consultation, and when it is provided, palliati...

Implications of pediatric palliative consulta...

Article indépendant | ROSSFELD, Zachary M. | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°7 | vol.22

Background: The impact of specialty pediatric palliative care (PPC) on intensive care unit (ICU) length of stay for children is unclear. Objective: To estimate the impact of PPC consultation by analyzing ICU stay as a dynamic outc...

Self-assessment of skills and competencies am...

Article indépendant | ROSSFELD, Zachary M. | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°2 | vol.21

OBJECTIVE: To describe our institutional experience with a four-week pediatric HPM elective rotation and its impact on residents' self-rated competencies. BACKGROUND: In the spirit of bolstering primary hospice and palliative medi...

De la même série

Mechanical ventilation for children approachi...

Article indépendant | PUCCETTI, Deirdre F. | Hospital pediatrics | n°12 | vol.14

OBJECTIVE: To determine the prevalence of invasive and noninvasive mechanical ventilation (IMV and NIV) for children who die in the hospital, to assess for change over time, and to determine the association between mode(s) of vent...

Validation of administrative codes for pallia...

Article indépendant | O'KEEFE, Siobhán | Hospital pediatrics | n°2 | vol.11

OBJECTIVES: To determine the validity of palliative care (PC) administrative codes (V66.7 and Z51.5) among critically ill pediatric patients. METHODS: In this single-center retrospective cohort study, we included all hospitalizati...

Timing of palliative consultation for childre...

Article indépendant | ROSSFELD, Zachary M. | Hospital pediatrics | n°5 | vol.9

BACKGROUND: The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends palliative care for children at the diagnosis of serious illness. Yet few children who die receive specialty palliative care consultation, and when it is provided, palliati...

Chargement des enrichissements...