Palliative care referrals in cardiac disease

Article indépendant

MOYNIHAN, Katie M. | HEITH, Catherine S. | SNAMAN, Jennifer M. | SMITH-PARRISH, Melissa | BAKAS, Anna | GE, Shirley | CERQUEIRA, Amanda Vidotto | BAILEY, Valerie | BEKE, Dorothy | WOLFE, Joanne | MORELL, Emily | GAUVREAU, Kimberlee | BLUME, Elizabeth D.

Objectives: With evidence of benefits of pediatric palliative care (PPC) integration, we sought to characterize subspecialty PPC referral patterns and end of life (EOL) care in pediatric advanced heart disease (AHD). Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, we compared inpatient pediatric (<21 years) deaths due to AHD in 2 separate 3-year epochs: 2007–2009 (early) and 2015–2018 (late). Demographics, disease burden, medical interventions, mode of death, and hospital charges were evaluated for temporal changes and PPC influence. Results: Of 3409 early-epoch admissions, there were 110 deaths; the late epoch had 99 deaths in 4032 admissions. In the early epoch, 45 patients (1.3% admissions, 17% deaths) were referred for PPC, compared with 146 late-epoch patients (3.6% admissions, 58% deaths). Most deaths (186 [89%]) occurred in the cardiac ICU after discontinuation of life-sustaining therapy (138 [66%]). Medical therapies included ventilation (189 [90%]), inotropes (184 [88%]), cardiopulmonary resuscitation (68 [33%]), or mechanical circulatory support (67 [32%]), with no temporal difference observed. PPC involvement was associated with decreased mechanical circulatory support, ventilation, inotropes, or cardiopulmonary resuscitation at EOL, and children were more likely to be awake and be receiving enteral feeds. PPC involvement increased advance care planning, with lower hospital charges on day of death and 7 days before (respective differences $5058 [P = .02] and $25 634 [P = .02]). Conclusions: Pediatric AHD deaths are associated with high medical intensity; however, children with PPC consultation experienced substantially less invasive interventions at EOL. Further study is warranted to explore these findings and how palliative care principles can be better integrated into care.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1542/peds.2020-018580

Voir la revue «Pediatrics, 147»

Autres numéros de la revue «Pediatrics»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Palliative care referrals in cardiac disease

Article indépendant | MOYNIHAN, Katie M. | Pediatrics | n°3 | vol.147

Objectives: With evidence of benefits of pediatric palliative care (PPC) integration, we sought to characterize subspecialty PPC referral patterns and end of life (EOL) care in pediatric advanced heart disease (AHD). Methods: In t...

Assessment of an instrument to measure interd...

Article | BAILEY, Valerie | JAMA network open | n°5 | vol.5

Importance: Lack of pediatric end-of-life care quality indicators and challenges ascertaining family perspectives make staff perceptions valuable. Cardiac intensive care unit (CICU) interdisciplinary staff play an integral role su...

Assessment of an instrument to measure interd...

Article indépendant | BAILEY, Valerie | JAMA network open | n°5 | vol.5

Importance: Lack of pediatric end-of-life care quality indicators and challenges ascertaining family perspectives make staff perceptions valuable. Cardiac intensive care unit (CICU) interdisciplinary staff play an integral role su...

De la même série

Surgical intervention in patients receiving p...

Article indépendant | ELLIS, Danielle I. | Pediatrics | n°2 | vol.151

Background and objectives: Many patients receiving pediatric palliative care (PPC) present with surgically treatable problems. The role of surgery in the care of these patients, however, has not yet been defined. We conducted a co...

Palliative care programs in children’s hospit...

Article indépendant | WEAVER, Meaghann S. | Pediatrics | n°4 | vol.150

This study determined the prevalence of PPC programs in the United States and compared the environment of children’s hospitals with and without PPC programs.Analyses of the multicenter Children’s Hospital Association Annual Benchm...

Development of primary palliative care end-of...

Article indépendant | BOGETZ, Jori F. | Pediatrics | n°6 | vol.150

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Children with complex chronic conditions (CCCs) and their families deserve high-quality pediatric palliative care (PPC) throughout their illness trajectory, including at end of life (EOL). Standard EOL q...

The case for advance care planning in the NIC...

Article indépendant | LIN, Matthew | Pediatrics | n°6 | vol.150

Many NICUs have reached an inflection point where infant deaths following limitation of life-sustaining treatments outnumber those following unsuccessful resuscitations, and many infants who survive continue to require intensive s...

Feeding the family : cultural humility in ber...

Article indépendant | MADNI, Arshia | Pediatrics | n°6 | vol.150

Sara and Ali’s only son, Musa, was diagnosed with acute myelogenous leukemia at an academic hospital in the United Arab Emirates. Despite chemotherapy and subsequent bone marrow transplant, Musa’s prognosis was grave: the aggress...

Chargement des enrichissements...