Perceptions of bereaved caregivers and clinicians about end-of-life care for patients with destination therapy left ventricular assist devices

Article indépendant

CHUZI, Sarah | OGUNSEITAN, Adeboye | CAMERON, Kenzie A. | GRADY, Kathleen | SCHULZE, Lauren | WILCOX, Jane E.

Background: Patients with left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) implanted as destination therapy may receive suboptimal preparation for and care at the end of life, but there is limited understanding of the reasons for these shortcomings. Exploring perceptions of individuals (caregivers and clinicians) who are closely involved in the end-of-life experience with patients with destination therapy LVADs can help identify key opportunities for improving care. Methods and Results: We conducted semistructured qualitative interviews with 7 bereaved caregivers of patients with destination therapy LVADs and 10 interdisciplinary LVAD clinicians. Interviews explored perceptions of preparing for end of life, communicating about end of life, and providing and receiving end-of-life care, and were analyzed using a 2-step team-based inductive approach to coding and analysis. Six themes pertaining to end-of-life experiences were derived: (1) timing end-of-life discussions in the setting of unpredictable illness trajectories, (2) prioritizing end-of-life preparation and decision-making, (3) communicating uncertainty while providing support and hope, (4) lack of consensus on responsibility for end-of-life discussions, (5) perception of the LVAD team as invincible, and (6) divergent perceptions of LVAD withdrawal. Conclusions This study revealed 6 unique aspects of end-of-life care for patients with destination therapy LVADs as reported by clinicians and caregivers. Themes coalesced around communication, team-based care, and challenges unique to patients with LVADs at end of life. Programmatic changes may address some aspects, including training clinicians in LVAD-specific communication skills. Other aspects, such as standardizing the role of the palliative care team and developing practical interventions that enable timely advance care planning during LVAD care, will require multifaceted interventions.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1161/JAHA.121.020949

Voir la revue «Journal of the American Heart Association, 10»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of the American Heart Association»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Perceptions of bereaved caregivers and clinic...

Article indépendant | CHUZI, Sarah | Journal of the American Heart Association | n°15 | vol.10

Background: Patients with left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) implanted as destination therapy may receive suboptimal preparation for and care at the end of life, but there is limited understanding of the reasons for these sho...

Pre-ventricular assist device palliative care...

Article indépendant | CHUZI, Sarah | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT

INTRODUCTION: In 2013 the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a mandate requiring that all patients undergoing destination therapy ventricular assist device (DT VAD) implantation have access to a palliative car...

Pre-ventricular assist device palliative care...

Article indépendant | CHUZI, Sarah | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT

INTRODUCTION: In 2013 the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a mandate requiring that all patients undergoing destination therapy ventricular assist device (DT VAD) implantation have access to a palliative car...

De la même série

Exploring health care providers' experiences ...

Article indépendant | GRAHAM, Cassandra | Journal of the American Heart Association | n°13 | vol.11

Background: The HeartFull Collaborative is a regionally organized model of care which involves specialist palliative care and cardiology health care providers (HCPs) in a collaborative, home-based palliative care approach for pati...

Social isolation and implementation of advanc...

Article indépendant | KITAKATA, Hiroki | Journal of the American Heart Association | n°21 | vol.11

Background: The implementation of advance care planning (ACP) in heart failure management is insufficient. Social isolation (SI) could be a barrier to ACP initiation, albeit the relationship between SI and patients' preference for...

Do not attempt resuscitation order rates in h...

Article indépendant | SHORE, Supriya | Journal of the American Heart Association | n°23 | vol.11

Background: Descriptions of do not attempt resuscitation (DNAR) orders in heart failure (HF) are limited. We describe use of DNAR orders in HF hospitalizations relative to other common conditions, focusing on race. Methods and Res...

Perceptions of bereaved caregivers and clinic...

Article indépendant | CHUZI, Sarah | Journal of the American Heart Association | n°15 | vol.10

Background: Patients with left ventricular assist devices (LVADs) implanted as destination therapy may receive suboptimal preparation for and care at the end of life, but there is limited understanding of the reasons for these sho...

Association between palliative care and death...

Article indépendant | QUINN, Kieran L. | Journal of the American Heart Association | n°5 | vol.9

Background: Palliative care is associated with improved symptom control and quality of life in people with heart failure. There is conflicting evidence as to whether it is associated with a greater likelihood of death at home in t...

Chargement des enrichissements...