In-home care at the end of life-how much is needed?

Article indépendant

AGAR, Meera R.

We spend a large proportion of our lives in our home environment, so on face value it is a natural assumption to consider dying at home an important goal for quality end-of-life care.1 As the need for care at the end of life grows in the face of an aging population, understanding how best to configure and fund services for people approaching the end of life is increasingly important. It requires consideration of what outcomes we are aiming to achieve and for whom (the patient, their carer, and/or the health system), and whether those who are at the end of their life prioritize these factors similarly.2 In terms of models of care, the challenge is to determine the role, configuration, and optimal timing for in-home services, as well as the proportion of overall services that should be performed in the community. When home is the preferred place of death, in-home services are critical to ensure we can meet this preference while maintaining adequate symptom control and support for both the person themselves and their caregivers.3 Meta-analyses support increased odds of dying at home when adults with advanced illness receive home-based palliative care, with reduced symptom burden. [Introduction de l'article]

https://jamanetwork.com/journals/jamanetworkopen/fullarticle/2785790

Voir la revue «JAMA network open, 4»

Autres numéros de la revue «JAMA network open»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

In-home care at the end of life-how much is n...

Article | AGAR, Meera R. | JAMA network open | n°11 | vol.4

We spend a large proportion of our lives in our home environment, so on face value it is a natural assumption to consider dying at home an important goal for quality end-of-life care.1 As the need for care at the end of life grows...

In-home care at the end of life-how much is n...

Article indépendant | AGAR, Meera R. | JAMA network open | n°11 | vol.4

We spend a large proportion of our lives in our home environment, so on face value it is a natural assumption to consider dying at home an important goal for quality end-of-life care.1 As the need for care at the end of life grows...

Assessing the exertion required to induce bre...

Article | WHITE, Kahren M. | BMC palliative care | n°1 | vol.18

Background: The aim of the study was to assess four evidence-based assessments utilising exercise challenges that induce breathlessness, each with progressively less demanding levels of exertion, which can be tailored to people wi...

De la même série

Preferred and actual location of death in ado...

Article indépendant | ODEJIDE, Oreofe O. | JAMA network open | n°1 | vol.8

IMPORTANCE: Adolescent and young adult (AYA) patients with advanced cancer often die in hospital settings. Data characterizing the degree to which this pattern of care is concordant with patient goals are sparse. OBJECTIVE: To eva...

Knowledge of and preferences for medical aid ...

Article indépendant | KOZLOV, Elissa | JAMA network open | n°2 | vol.8

IMPORTANCE: Medical aid in dying (MAID) is legal in jurisdictions covering more than one-fifth of the US population and has been used by a largely White, educated population. The extent to which knowledge of MAID and preferences f...

Algorithm-based palliative care in patients w...

Article indépendant | PARIKH, Ravi B. | JAMA network open | n°2 | vol.8

IMPORTANCE: Among patients with advanced solid malignant tumors, early specialty palliative care (PC) is guideline recommended, but strategies to increase PC access and effectiveness in community oncology are lacking. OBJECTIVE: T...

Hospice use among Medicare beneficiaries with...

Article indépendant | BOCK, Meredith | JAMA network open | n°3 | vol.8

IMPORTANCE: Neurodegenerative disorders are now the most common reason that Medicare beneficiaries enroll in hospice for end-of-life care. People with all-cause dementia have high rates of suboptimal hospice use, but little is kno...

Assisted dying and the slippery slope argumen...

Article indépendant | DELIENS, Luc | JAMA network open | n°4 | vol.8

While the social and political debate around assisted dying remains fierce and unremitting, legalization of assisted dying has expanded significantly in Europe, North America, and Australia during the past 20 years. Assisted dying...

Chargement des enrichissements...