| Literature DB >> 27436665 |
R Mathew1, N Davies1, J Manthorpe2, S Iliffe1.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Decision-making, when providing care and treatment for a person with dementia at the end of life, can be complex and challenging. There is a lack of guidance available to support practitioners and family carers, and even those experienced in end of life dementia care report a lack of confidence in decision-making. It is thought that the use of heuristics (rules of thumb) may aid decision-making. The aim of this study is to identify whether heuristics are used in end of life dementia care, and if so, to identify the context in which they are being used.Entities:
Keywords: Decision-making; PALLIATIVE CARE
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27436665 PMCID: PMC4964249 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010416
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Heuristic used to determine if patients presenting to the emergency department need admission to the coronary care unit.
Database search terms
| Search terms | |
|---|---|
| Dementia | Dementia, Alzheimer disease, delirium, amnestic and cognitive disorders, cognitive defect, cognitive impairment |
| Palliative care | Palliative care, terminal care, end of life care, terminally ill patients, death and dying |
| Decision-making | Decision-making, algorithms, decision support techniques, decision support systems, clinical judgment, heuristic, rules of thumb |
Figure 2PRISMA diagram.
Summary of papers included (n=12)
| Author, year of publication | Country | Publication type | Management decision | Description |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cahill | Republic of Ireland and Northern Ireland | Peer-reviewed paper | Ensuring a ‘good death’ | Guidelines for nursing homes delivering end of life care, which have been developed from in-depth qualitative interviews with bereaved caregivers of people with dementia |
| Callahan, 1995 | USA | Report | Ending life-sustaining treatment | Report which raises the question; under what circumstances should life-sustaining treatment for someone with dementia be ended? |
| Gillick, 2001 | USA | Peer-reviewed paper | Swallowing/eating difficulties | Provides a stepwise approach about what nursing homes should do when someone with dementia stops eating |
| Karlawish | USA | Peer-reviewed paper | Ensuring a ‘good death’ | Describes how to reach consensus in decision-making, using a case study of a person with dementia who develops neurogenic dysphagia and aspiration pneumonia |
| Kovach | USA | Peer-reviewed paper | Pain and agitation | Quasi-experimental study of a 5-step and 9-step decision support tool for management of pain and agitation in people with dementia |
| McAlister | Canada | Peer-reviewed paper | Swallowing/eating difficulties | Proposes an analytic approach to decision-making for people with dementia who refuse feeding by hand |
| Palecek | USA | Peer-reviewed paper | Swallowing/eating difficulties | Proposes ‘comfort feeding only’ as a means to eliminate the apparent care–no care dichotomy assumed by a decision to forgo artificial hydration and nutrition |
| Schwartz | USA | Peer-reviewed paper | Swallowing/eating difficulties | Synthesis of literature which supports the notion that forgoing artificial nutrition and hydration is acceptable in dementia end of life care. Discusses decision-making principles when considering artificial nutrition and hydration as an option for feeding |
| Smith | UK | Peer-reviewed paper | Swallowing/eating difficulties | Contains an algorithm to aid decisions about eating |
| van der Steen | The Netherlands | Peer-reviewed paper | Treatment of pneumonia | Through the use of case studies, describes the use of a checklist to make decisions about whether or not to treat pneumonia in patients with dementia |
| van der Maaden | The Netherlands | Peer-reviewed paper | Treatment of pneumonia | A 5-round Delphi study, from which a guideline was created for optimal symptom control for patients with dementia who develop pneumonia |
| Zagaria, 2015 | USA | Peer-reviewed paper | Rationalising medication | Promotes a philosophy of stopping any medication that is not in line with the primary goals of care |
Figure 3Example heuristic.