Improving palliative and supportive care in advanced cirrhosis : the HepatoCare model of integrated collaborative care

Article indépendant

KEARNEY, Alison | TIWARI, Neha | CULLEN, Olivia | LEGG, Amy | ARBI, Ismail | DOUGLAS, Carol | LEGGETT, Barbara | FENECH, Mary | MINA, Joanne | HOEY, Paris | SKOIEN, Richard

BACKGROUND: Patients with advanced cirrhosis experience an unpredictable disease trajectory but are infrequently referred to palliative care (PC) services and rarely undertake advance care planning (ACP). AIM: We assessed whether a novel model of care increased provision of meaningful PC in advanced cirrhosis compared with standard of care (SOC). METHODS: Thirty consecutive hepatology clinic outpatients with advanced cirrhosis, meeting one or more cirrhosis-related PC referral criteria, consented to treatment in the HepatoCare clinic (PC physician, specialist liver nurse, pharmacist) in parallel with usual specialist hepatology care. A control cohort of 30 consecutive outpatients with advanced cirrhosis undergoing SOC treatment was retrospectively identified for comparison. The primary outcome was provision of meaningful PC using HepatoCare versus SOC. Additional clinical outcomes were assessed over 12 months or until death and significant differences were identified. RESULTS: The intervention and control cohorts had similarly advanced cirrhosis (mean Child-Pugh scores 8.7 vs 8.2, P = 0.46; mean model for end-stage liver disease scores 14.4 vs 14.6, P = 0.88) but a lower 12-month mortality rate (33% HepatoCare vs 67% SOC; P = 0.02). The intervention cohort experienced higher uptake of formal ACP (100% vs 25% for the control cohort) and outpatient PC referral (100% vs 40%), and were more likely to die at home or in a PC bed/hospice (80% vs 30%). The majority of the HepatoCare cohort (81%) had medications safely deprescribed and experienced fewer unplanned admission days (470 vs 794). CONCLUSIONS: HepatoCare is a novel multidisciplinary model of care that integrates effective PC and specialist hepatology management to improve outcomes in advanced cirrhosis.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/imj.16248

Voir la revue «Internal medicine journal, 53»

Autres numéros de la revue «Internal medicine journal»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Improving palliative and supportive care in a...

Article indépendant | KEARNEY, Alison | Internal medicine journal | n°11 | vol.53

BACKGROUND: Patients with advanced cirrhosis experience an unpredictable disease trajectory but are infrequently referred to palliative care (PC) services and rarely undertake advance care planning (ACP). AIM: We assessed whether ...

Risk of 12-month mortality among hospital inp...

Article | MUDGE, Alison M. | BMJ supportive & palliative care

OBJECTIVES: People with serious life-limiting disease benefit from advance care planning, but require active identification. This study applied the Gold Standards Framework Proactive Identification Guidance (GSF-PIG) to a general ...

Risk of 12-month mortality among hospital inp...

Article indépendant | MUDGE, Alison M. | BMJ supportive & palliative care

OBJECTIVES: People with serious life-limiting disease benefit from advance care planning, but require active identification. This study applied the Gold Standards Framework Proactive Identification Guidance (GSF-PIG) to a general ...

De la même série

The conveyor belt for older people nearing th...

Article indépendant | HILLMAN, Ken | Internal medicine journal | n°8 | vol.54

The current fallback position for the elderly frail nearing the end of life (less than 12 months to live) is hospitalisation. There is a reluctance to use the term 'terminally ill' for this population, resulting in overtreatment, ...

Prevalence and correlates of advance care pla...

Article indépendant | PANOZZO, Laura | Internal medicine journal | n°4 | vol.53

The prevalence and factors associated with advance care planning (ACP) documents for Australian public hospital inpatients were determined through cross-sectional study of 123 Victorian hospitals between July 2016 and December 201...

Missed opportunities : Saving lives through o...

Article indépendant | RAY, Robert | Internal medicine journal | n°5 | vol.53

Organ donation after voluntary assisted dying (VAD) in Australia may potentially increase organ transplant rates. Despite significant international experience with donation after VAD, there has been little discussion of this in Au...

Improving palliative and supportive care in a...

Article indépendant | KEARNEY, Alison | Internal medicine journal | n°11 | vol.53

BACKGROUND: Patients with advanced cirrhosis experience an unpredictable disease trajectory but are infrequently referred to palliative care (PC) services and rarely undertake advance care planning (ACP). AIM: We assessed whether ...

A multi-centre study on patients dying from C...

Article indépendant | EVERITT, Rachel | Internal medicine journal | n°12 | vol.52

Background: COVID-19 has led to challenges in providing effective and timely communication in healthcare. Services have been required to adapt and evolve as successful communication remains core to high quality patient-centred car...

Chargement des enrichissements...