Palliative care consultations in patients with severe traumatic brain injury : who receives palliative care consultations and what does that mean for utilization?

Article indépendant

WILLIAMSON, Theresa L. | ADIL, Syed M. | SHALITA, Chidyaonga | CHARALAMBOUS, Lefko T. | MITCHELL, Taylor | YANG, Zidanyue | PARENTE, Beth A. | LEE, Hui-Jie | UBEL, Peter A. | LEMMON, Monica E. | GALANOS, Anthony N. | LAD, Shivanand P. | KOMISAROW, Jordan M.

Background: Palliative care has the potential to improve goal-concordant care in severe traumatic brain injury (sTBI). Our primary objective was to illuminate the demographic profiles of patients with sTBI who receive palliative care encounters (PCEs), with an emphasis on the role of race. Secondary objectives were to analyze PCE usage over time and compare health care resource utilization between patients with or without PCEs. Methods: The National Inpatient Sample database was queried for patients age = 18 who had a diagnosis of sTBI, defined by using International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision codes. PCEs were defined by using International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision code V66.7 and trended from 2001 to 2015. To assess factors associated with PCE in patients with sTBI, we performed unweighted generalized estimating equations regression. PCE association with decision making was modeled via its effect on rate of percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG) tube placement. To quantify differences in PCE-related decisions by race, race was modeled as an effect modifier. Results: From 2001 to 2015, the proportion of palliative care usage in patients with sTBI increased from 1.5 to 36.3%, with 41.6% White, 22.3% Black, and 25% Hispanic patients with sTBI having a palliative care consultation in 2015, respectively. From 2008 to 2015, we identified 17,673 sTBI admissions. White and affluent patients were more likely to have a PCE than Black, Hispanic, and low socioeconomic status patients. Across all races, patients receiving a PCE resulted in a lower rate of PEG tube placement; however, White patients exhibited a larger reduction of PEG tube placement than Black patients. Patients using palliative care had lower total hospital costs (median $16,368 vs. $26,442, respectively). Conclusions: Palliative care usage for sTBI has increased dramatically this century and it reduces resource utilization. This is true across races, however, its usage rate and associated effect on decision making are race-dependent, with White patients receiving more PCE and being more likely to decline the use of a PEG tube if they have had a PCE.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12028-021-01366-2

Voir la revue «Neurocritical care»

Autres numéros de la revue «Neurocritical care»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Assessing the impact of a novel integrated pa...

Article | RAY, Emily M. | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°4 | vol.22

BACKGROUND: Evidence increasingly supports the integration of specialist palliative care (PC) into routine cancer care. A novel, fully integrated PC and medical oncology inpatient service was developed at Duke University Hospital ...

Assessing the impact of a novel integrated pa...

Article indépendant | RAY, Emily M. | JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°4 | vol.22

BACKGROUND: Evidence increasingly supports the integration of specialist palliative care (PC) into routine cancer care. A novel, fully integrated PC and medical oncology inpatient service was developed at Duke University Hospital ...

Palliative care consultation is underutilized...

Article | EVANS, Brooke A. | The American journal of hospice and palliative care | n°2 | vol.37

BACKGROUND: American College of Surgeons recommends palliative care and surgeons collaborate on the care of patients with poor prognoses. These collaborations are done to discuss symptom management and goals of care. However, cont...

De la même série

Withdrawal of life-sustaining treatments in p...

Article indépendant | LAZARIDIS, Christos | Neurocritical care

BACKGROUND: Withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment (WOLST) is the leading proximate cause of death in patients with perceived devastating brain injury (PDBI). There are reasons to believe that a potentially significant proportion...

Predictors of surrogate decision makers selec...

Article indépendant | GARG, Anisha | Neurocritical care

Background: Patients with a severe acute brain injury admitted to the intensive care unit often have a poor neurological prognosis. In these situations, a clinician is responsible for conducting a goals-of-care conversation with t...

The intersection of neurology and religion : ...

Article indépendant | LEWIS, Ariane | Neurocritical care

BACKGROUND: To enhance knowledge about religious objections to brain death/death by neurologic criteria (BD/DNC), we surveyed hospital chaplains about their experience with and beliefs about BD/DNC. METHODS: We distributed an onli...

Palliative care consultations in patients wit...

Article indépendant | WILLIAMSON, Theresa L. | Neurocritical care

Background: Palliative care has the potential to improve goal-concordant care in severe traumatic brain injury (sTBI). Our primary objective was to illuminate the demographic profiles of patients with sTBI who receive palliative c...

A taxonomy of objections to brain death deter...

Article indépendant | MORRISON, Wynne E. | Neurocritical care

Family objections to evaluating a patient for death by neurologic criteria, or "brain death," are challenging for the family and the medical team. In this article, we categorize brain death evaluation refusals into a taxonomy: inf...

Chargement des enrichissements...