| Literature DB >> 22053810 |
Karen Cox1, Nima Moghaddam, Kathryn Almack, Kristian Pollock, Jane Seymour.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Over the past ten years there has been an increasing focus on the need for improving the experience of end of life care. A number of policy initiatives have been introduced to develop approaches to discussing and documenting individual preferences for end of life care, in particular preferred place to die.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22053810 PMCID: PMC3227605 DOI: 10.1186/1472-684X-10-18
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Sampling by service
| Service | Number of deaths | Sampling fraction | Number of sampled deaths/cases (random selection) |
|---|---|---|---|
| GSF GP Practice | 38 | 50% | 19 |
| Heart Failure Community Matrons | 30 | 50% | 15 |
| Hospital Specialist Palliative care service | 307* | 5% | 15 |
| Non-GSF Nursing Care Home | 32 | 50% | 16 |
*This service was based in a hospital but provided hospice care support as well. The focus here was on the hospital element and this figure represents the number of deaths in hospital only.
Figure 1Information collected from patient case notes.
Discussions relating to end of life care recorded in the last four weeks of life
| GSF GP | Heart Failure | Hospital | Non-GSF | Total | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 15 | (79) | 5 | (33) | 11 | (73) | 31 | (48) | ||
| No | 4 | (21) | 10 | (67) | 4 | (27) | 16 | (100) | 34 | (52) |
| Yes | 7 | (37) | 6 | (40) | 11 | (73) | 11 | (69) | 35 | (54) |
| No | 12 | (63) | 9 | (60) | 4 | (27) | 5 | (31) | 30 | (46) |
| Yes | 8 | (53) | 6 | (38) | 14 | (22) | ||||
| No | 19 | (100) | 15 | (100) | 7 | (47) | 10 | (63) | 51 | (79) |
| Yes | 1 | (5) | 5 | (31) | 6 | (9) | ||||
| No | 18 | (95) | 15 | (100) | 15 | (100) | 11 | (69) | 59 | (91) |
Percentages may not add up to 100 due to rounding.
Preferences and outcomes in relation to place of death recorded in the last four weeks of life
| GSF GP | Heart Failure | Hospital | Non-GSF | Total | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yes | 10 | (53) | 3 | (100) | 2 | (18) | 8 | (100) | 20 | (49) |
| No | 9 | (47) | 9 | (82) | 12 | (51) | ||||
| Patient's own home | 8 | (80) | 2 | (67) | 7 | (64) | 17 | (53) | ||
| Hospital | 2 | (18) | 1 | (13) | 3 | (9) | ||||
| Hospice | 1 | (10) | 1 | (3) | ||||||
| Care home | 1 | (10) | 1 | (33) | 1 | (9) | 7 | (88) | 10 | (31) |
| Patient-carer differences | 1b | (9) | 1 | (3) | ||||||
| Patient's own home | 11 | (58) | 6 | (40) | 17 | (26) | ||||
| Hospital | 5 | (26) | 5 | (33) | 15 | (100) | 4 | (25) | 29 | (45) |
| Hospice | 1 | (5) | 1 | (2) | ||||||
| Care home | 1 | (5) | 2 | (13) | 12 | (75) | 15 | (23) | ||
| Not recorded | 1 | (5) | 2 | (13) | 3 | (5) | ||||
| Yes | 7 | (70) | 3 | (100) | 2 | (18) | 8 | (100) | 20 | (63) |
| No | 3 | (30) | 9 | (82) | 12 | (38) | ||||
Percentages may not add up to 100 due to rounding.
aWhere multiple PPC statements were made, the final PPC is represented.
bPatient wanted to go home, carer wanted the patient to stay in hospital: discharge plans were suspended.