| Literature DB >> 18620567 |
Elizabeth L Sampson1, Ingela Thuné-Boyle, Riitta Kukkastenvehmas, Louise Jones, Adrian Tookman, Michael King, Martin R Blanchard.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is increasing interest in improving the quality of care that patients with advanced dementia receive when they are dying. Our understanding of the palliative care needs of these patients and the natural history of advanced disease is limited. Many people with advanced dementia have unplanned emergency admissions to the acute hospital; this is a critical event: half will die within 6 months. These patients have complex needs but often lack capacity to express their wishes. Often carers are expected to make decisions. Advance care planning discussions are rarely performed, despite potential benefits such more consistent supportive healthcare, a reduction in emergency admissions to the acute hospital and better resolution of carer bereavement. DESIGN/Entities:
Year: 2008 PMID: 18620567 PMCID: PMC2475530 DOI: 10.1186/1472-684X-7-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Study schedule
| KD-10 | Carer | ||||||
| Satisfaction with end of life care in dementia scale | Carer | ||||||
| Decision satisfaction inventory | Carer | ||||||
| EQ 5D | Carer | ||||||
| Visual analogue scale | Carer | ||||||
| Economic data | Carer | ||||||
| Pain scale measurements | Patient | ||||||
| Painful interventions scale | Patient care records | ||||||
| Other interventions | Patient care records | ||||||
| Quality of end of life care | Patient care records | ||||||
| Adherence to LCP | Patient care records | ||||||
| Numbers choosing to make ACP | Patient care records | ||||||
| Adherence to advance care plan | Patient care records | ||||||
| Referrals to palliative care team | Patient care records | ||||||
| Unplanned admissions | Patient care records | ||||||
| Place of death | Patient care records | ||||||
| Economic data | Patient care records | ||||||
Patient assessment
| An observational scale describing a continuum of 7 successive stages from normal to the most severe dementia | |
| The most widely used instrument for the detection of delirium. It has a sensitivity of 94–100% and a specificity of 90–95%. | |
| A brief 6-item scale to measure the intensity/severity of acute and chronic pain in late stage dementia | |
| Pain Assessment Checklist for Seniors with Severe Dementia ( | Measures the number of pain symptoms present |
| A 10-item observational scale for use in non-verbal adults. Addresses a wide range of pain indicators | |
| Clinical assessment of patient's ability to communicate their needs including non-verbal communication and comprehension. | |
| The Waterlow scale is routinely used for the assessment of risk for developing pressure sores. | |
| Is the patient bed bound/able to turn themselves? Can they walk with/without use of aids i.e. Zimmer frame? | |
| Continence is routinely assessed as part of the FAST scale. Patients will also be assessed for the presence of urinary tract infection and constipation. | |
| As routinely documented on food and fluid chart | |
| Formal assessment by speech and language therapy will be requested if there is clinical suspicion of difficulty. |
Study outcome measures
| 10-item scale, validated and widely used screening tool for psychological distress. It is discriminative in detecting "caseness" for DSM-IV disorders | |
| Standardised, short, 5-item scale instrument for health and quality of life | |
| Validated measure with three sub-scales measuring overall satisfaction with medical care, satisfaction with the decision making process, and satisfaction with the decisions made | |
| Validated, 16-item scale measures uncertainly and difficulties in the decision making process [ | |
| Specifically developed for use in advanced/end stage dementia. Three separate domains of measurement; satisfaction with the terminal care, symptom management, comfort during the last 7 days of life. Only to be completed after the patient has died. | |
| A standard 10 cm visual analogue scale to measure carers satisfaction with: | |
| Measures invasive hospital procedures shown to be moderately to severely painful or uncomfortable including arterial blood gas testing, mechanical ventilation, naso-gastric feeding and bladder catheterisation | |
| i.e. Resuscitation status, PEG feeding, prescription of neuroleptics | |
| Prescription of analgesia at time of death, use of Liverpool Care Pathway | |
| Time of intervention to time of death | |
| Numbers choosing to make advanced care plan and adherence to advance care plan | |
| For emergency acute admissions | |
| To community palliative care | |
| Baseline, 6 months and, if relevant, for the month prior to death |