National strategy for integrating palliative care into standard cardiac care for people living with heart failure : a position statement from the joint working group of the Swiss Societies of Cardiology and Palliative Care

Article indépendant

SOBANSKI, Piotr Z. | DE PERNA, Maria Luisa | ECKSTEIN, Sandra | FUSI-SCHMIDHAUSER, Tanja | GAERTNER, Jan | GONZALEZ-JARAMILLO, Valentina | HENTSCH, Lisa | HERTLER, Caroline | HULLIN, Roger | HUNZIKER, Lukas | LARKIN, Philip J. | MERCOLI, Jean-Baptiste | MEYER, Philippe | MOSCHOVITIS, Giorgio | PAUL, Matthias | PFISTER, Otmar

INTRODUCTION: Heart failure (HF) causes high symptom burden and shortens life expectancy. Implementation of Palliative Care (PC) concurrently with cardiologic guidelines-directed medical therapy (GDMT) improves quality-of-life (QoL) more than disease-oriented management alone but is underused. To facilitate provision of PC for people living with HF, the Swiss Society of Cardiology (SSC) and the Swiss Society for Palliative Care (palliative.ch) have created joint working-group. METHODS: Dyads representing cardiology and PC from Swiss HF centres have been identified. Through online voting, workshops and Delphi process priority topics for incorporation of PC into standard care for people with HF have been identified. RESULTS: 18 experts, from 8 Swiss HF-centres identified main topics relevant for implementation of PC in usual HF care: timely recognition of unaddressed health-related needs of affected people and their relatives (using validated assessment tools ID-PALL or NAT-PD:CH at least as the triggers evolve), identifying key palliative interventions for care of people living with HF, identifying strategies to facilitate cooperation between specialist PC and cardiology, defining research agenda to investigate efficacy of PC interventions, quality of care criteria, and outcomes of PC provision in Switzerland. DISCUSSION: Improvement of QoL of people with HF and their relatives could be greater if PC would be integrated in usual care timely. Frequent needs assessment, using validated tools helps to recognize people having unaddressed needs, and helps to replace the outdated, based on risk of dying, involvement of PC. Dialogue between both disciplines is crucial to provide care prolonging life of best quality during the whole journey living with disease.

http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fcvm.2025.1548595

Voir la revue «Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine, 12»

Autres numéros de la revue «Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

National strategy for integrating palliative ...

Article | SOBANSKI, Piotr Z. | Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine | vol.12

INTRODUCTION: Heart failure (HF) causes high symptom burden and shortens life expectancy. Implementation of Palliative Care (PC) concurrently with cardiologic guidelines-directed medical therapy (GDMT) improves quality-of-life (Qo...

Palliative care provision for people living w...

Article | HENTSCH, Lisa | Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine | vol.9

As life expectancy rises and the survival rate after acute cardiovascular events improves, the number of people living and dying with chronic heart failure is increasing. People suffering from chronic ischemic and non-ischemic hea...

Palliative care provision for people living w...

Article indépendant | HENTSCH, Lisa | Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine | vol.9

As life expectancy rises and the survival rate after acute cardiovascular events improves, the number of people living and dying with chronic heart failure is increasing. People suffering from chronic ischemic and non-ischemic hea...

De la même série

National strategy for integrating palliative ...

Article indépendant | SOBANSKI, Piotr Z. | Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine | vol.12

INTRODUCTION: Heart failure (HF) causes high symptom burden and shortens life expectancy. Implementation of Palliative Care (PC) concurrently with cardiologic guidelines-directed medical therapy (GDMT) improves quality-of-life (Qo...

Consensus document on palliative care in card...

Article indépendant | BONANAD, Clara | Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine | vol.10

There is an unmet need to create consensus documents on the management of cardiorenal patients since, due to the aging of the population and the rise of both pathologies, these patients are becoming more prevalent in daily clinica...

Palliative care in children with advanced hea...

Article indépendant | BERGSTRASSER, Eva | Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine | vol.9

Palliative care for children continues to evolve. More recently, this has also been true in the field of pediatric cardiology, particularly for children with advanced heart disease. In these children, similarly to children with ca...

Enhancing palliative care for patients with a...

Article indépendant | BLUM, Moritz | Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine | vol.9

Background: Score-based survival prediction in patients with advanced heart failure (HF) is complicated. Easy-to-use prognostication tools could inform clinical decision-making and palliative care delivery. Objective: To compare t...

Readiness of advance care planning among pati...

Article indépendant | FUKUE, Noriko | Frontiers in cardiovascular medicine | vol.9

Background: Advance care planning (ACP) is a widely advocated strategy to improve outcomes at end-of-life care for patients suffering from heart failure (HF). However, finding the right time to start ACP is challenging for healthc...

Chargement des enrichissements...