Cardiopulmonary resuscitation in pediatric patients under palliative home care : a multicenter retrospective study

Article indépendant

SCHNECK, Emmanuel | JANSSEN, Gisela | VAILLANT, Vera | VOELKER, Thomas | DECHERT, Oliver | TROCAN, Laura | SCHMITZ, Lioba | ROHDE, Marius | SANDER, Michael | HAUCH, Holger

Introduction: Patients under palliative home care have special needs for their end-of-life support, which in general does not automatically include cardiopulmonary resuscitation. However, emergency medical services (EMS) respond to emergencies in children under palliative care that lead to cardiopulmonary resuscitation. To understand the underlying steps of decision-making, this retrospective, cross-sectional, multicenter study aimed to analyze pediatric patients under palliative home care who had been resuscitated. Methods: This study included patients from three spezialized pediatric palliative home care (SHPC) teams. The primary study parameters were the prevalence of cardiopulmonary resuscitation and the decision-making for carrying out pediatric advanced life support (PALS). Further analyses included the causes of cardiac arrest, the type of CPR (basic life support, advanced life support), the patient´s outcome, and involvement of the SHPC in the resuscitation. Descriptive statistical analysis was performed. Results: In total, 880 pediatric patients under palliative home care were included over 8.5 years, of which 17 patients were resuscitated once and two patients twice (overall, 19 events with CPR, 21.6 per 1,000 cases). In 10 of the 19 incidents (52.6%), cardiac arrest occurred suddenly without being predictable. The causes of cardiac arrest varied widely. PALS was performed in 78.9% of the cases by EMS teams. In 12 of 19 events (63.2%) resuscitation was performed on explicit wish of the parents. However, from a medical point of view, only four resuscitation attempts were reasonable. In total 7 of 17 (41.2%) patients survived cardiac arrest with a comparable quality of life. Discussion: Overall, resuscitation attempts were rare events in children under home palliative therapy, but if they occur, EMS are often the primary caregivers. Most resuscitation attempts occurred on explicit wish of the parents independently of the meaningfulness of the medical procedure. Despite the presence of a life-limiting disease, survival with a similar quality was achieved in one third of all resuscitated patients. This study indicates that EMS should be trained for advanced life support in children under home palliative therapy and SHPC should address the scenario of cardiac arrest also in early stages of palliative treatment. These results underline that advance care planning for these children is urgently needed.

http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fped.2022.1105609

Voir la revue «Frontiers in pediatrics, 10»

Autres numéros de la revue «Frontiers in pediatrics»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Cardiopulmonary resuscitation in pediatric pa...

Article indépendant | SCHNECK, Emmanuel | Frontiers in pediatrics | vol.10

Introduction: Patients under palliative home care have special needs for their end-of-life support, which in general does not automatically include cardiopulmonary resuscitation. However, emergency medical services (EMS) respond t...

Prehospital emergency medicine for children r...

Article | HAUCH, Holger | Frontiers in pediatrics | vol.11

Background: The prevalence of children with life-limiting conditions is rising, and since the amendment of the social insurance code in Germany, palliative home care teams have treated an increasing number of children. These teams...

Prehospital emergency medicine for children r...

Article indépendant | HAUCH, Holger | Frontiers in pediatrics | vol.11

Background: The prevalence of children with life-limiting conditions is rising, and since the amendment of the social insurance code in Germany, palliative home care teams have treated an increasing number of children. These teams...

De la même série

Navigating the shadows : medical professional...

Article indépendant | CURKOVIC, Marko | Frontiers in pediatrics | vol.12

BACKGROUND AND AIM: This study explores healthcare professionals' perspectives on end-of-life care in pediatric intensive care units (ICUs) in Croatia, aiming to illuminate their experiences with such practices, underlying attitud...

Prehospital emergency medicine for children r...

Article indépendant | HAUCH, Holger | Frontiers in pediatrics | vol.11

Background: The prevalence of children with life-limiting conditions is rising, and since the amendment of the social insurance code in Germany, palliative home care teams have treated an increasing number of children. These teams...

A qualitative exploration of parental perspec...

Article indépendant | ANG, Felicia Jia Ler | Frontiers in pediatrics | vol.11

INTRODUCTION: Being responsive to end-users is essential to good care. Limited in-depth exploration of parental perspectives on care received by children over the course of serious illness has hindered the development of process m...

End-of-life decision-making in the neonatal i...

Article indépendant | MORILLO PALOMO, Ana | Frontiers in pediatrics | vol.11

Most paediatric deaths occur in the neonatal period, many of them in neonatal intensive care units after withdrawal of life support or the decision not to initiate new treatments. In these circumstances, discussions with families ...

Palliative and critical care : their converge...

Article indépendant | BUANG, Siti Nur Hanim | Frontiers in pediatrics | vol.10

Palliative care (PC) is an integral component of optimal critical care (CC) practice for pediatric patients facing life-threatening illness. PC acts as an additional resource for patients and families as they navigate through crit...

Chargement des enrichissements...