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Missing the mark : high rates of absent and untimely access to specialty palliative care in patients with peri-hospital mortality
Article indépendant
Background: Despite mounting evidence that specialty palliative care (PC) improves patients' symptoms, quality of life, and goal concordant care, these services are likely underutilized.
Objective: To determine the rate of missed and delayed opportunities for specialty PC in patients with peri-hospital death.
Design: A retrospective, cross-sectional analysis, using electronic medical records of a state-wide healthcare system in Colorado, was performed. Included were adults who died during admission or within seven days of discharge from January 2015 to October 2018 at an academic medical center and had prior encounters within the affiliated state-wide healthcare system in the last year of life. Excluded were patients with sudden or obstetrics-related deaths. Referral orders from the electronic medical record identified specialty PC consultation. Data from the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment linked with the medical record determined time from first PC consultation to death.
Results: The sample included 2088 decedent patients, with most deaths (81%) occurring in the hospital. Only 33% of patients had PC consultation, which was higher for patients with cancer (42%) than for those without cancer (26%). Of patients with specialty PC consultation, the median time from first referral to death was eight days (interquartile range: 3.25–25 days).
Conclusions: Patients with peri-hospital death have low rates of specialty PC consultation, which, when present, often occurs close to death. This suggests there is a high rate of missed opportunities for specialty PC in this population.
http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2019.0628
Voir la revue «JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 23»
Autres numéros de la revue «JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE»