| Literature DB >> 28526095 |
Amy Waller1,2, Natalie Dodd3,4, Martin H N Tattersall5, Balakrishnan Nair6,7, Rob Sanson-Fisher3,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As in other areas of health delivery, there is a need to ensure that end-of-life care is guided by patient centred research. A systematic review was undertaken to examine the quantity and quality of data-based research aimed at improving the (a) processes and (b) outcomes associated with delivering end-of-life care in hospital settings.Entities:
Keywords: Acute care; Advance care planning; End-of-life; Hospital; Palliative care
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28526095 PMCID: PMC5438503 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-017-0204-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Fig. 1Search strategy
Fig. 2Number of publications by year
Quality of intervention studies meeting EPOC design criteria (Low, High, Unclear)
| Author, Date Design | Type | Allocation sequence adequately generated? | Concealment of allocation | Baseline outcome measurement similar | Baseline characteristics similar | Incomplete outcome data adequately addressed | Knowledge of allocated interventions prevented | Protections against contamination | Selective outcome reporting | Free other risk of bias |
| End of life outcomes | ||||||||||
| Costantini 2014 [ | CRCT | L | L | L | L | L | H | L | L | H |
| Detering 2010 [ | RCT | L | L | L | L | L | L | H | L | L |
| Gade 2008 [ | RCT | L | L | L | H | L | U | U | L | L |
| Hanks 2002 [ | RCT | L | L | L | H | L | U | U | L | L |
| Sidebottom 2015 [ | RCT | U | U | L | H | L | U | H | L | L |
| Song 2005 [ | RCT | U | U | L | L | L | U | U | L | L |
| The SUPPORT Principal Investigators 1995 [ | RCT | L | L | L | L | L | L | U | L | L |
| End of life processes | ||||||||||
| Ahronheim 2000 [ | RCT | U | U | L | L | L | L | H | L | H |
| Bailey 2014 [ | SW | H | L | L | L | L | L | L | L | L |
| Cugliari 1995 [ | CCT | H | H | U | H | U | U | H | L | L |
| El-Jawahri 2015 [ | RCT | L | L | L | L | L | H | U | L | L |
| Grimaldo 2001 [ | RCT | L | L | L | L | L | U | U | L | L |
| Jacobsen 2011 [ | CCT | H | H | U | L | L | H | L | L | L |
| Meier 1996 [ | RCT | U | U | U | L | L | U | U | L | L |
| Nicolasora 2006 [ | RCT | L | U | U | L | L | H | U | L | L |
| Sampson 2011 [ | RCT | U | U | L | L | L | U | L | L | L |
| Study (ITS) | Independent of other changes? | Shape of effect pre-specified? | Intervention affected data collection? | Knowledge interventions adequately prevented | Incomplete outcome data adequately addressed? | Free from selective outcome reporting? | Other risk of bias? | |||
| Reilly 1995 [ | L | L | L | L | L | L | U | |||
Summary of findings of intervention studies (n=18)
| Reference, Country Design | Sample & Setting | Inclusion & Exclusion | Intervention | Outcome measures and time points | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| End of life processes | |||||
| Ahronheim et al. 2000 [ | Sample: 99 | Inclusion: FAST ≥6d, stable at least one month. | Type: Palliative care consultation, discussion with primary care team, family meeting and care recommendations | Primary: Mortality, site discharge, length of stay, readmissions DNR orders, systemic antibiotics | No differences in mortality, readmissions, length of stay. |
| Bailey et al. 2014 [ | Sample: 6066 | Staff: 1621 physicians, nurses, residents, allied health, pharmacy, mental health, admin and other | Type: Site visits, staff education, decision support tool (CCOS), follow-up consultations during 4 month training period | Primary: % with: Opioid order, DNR order, Location death; Nasogentric tube, | Improved orders for opioid, antipsychotic medication, benzodiazepines, death rattle medication, and advance directives. |
| Cugliari et al. 1995 [ | Sample: 419 | Inclusion criteria: >18 years, planned admission | Type: Written information + 18 min videotape of interviews with adults about experience with advance care planning; and instructions on completing ADs. | Recall of information | No difference between the groups in recall, understanding of proxy form, completion of form, or perceived importance of ADs. |
| El-Jawhari et al. 2010 [ | Sample: 150 | Inclusion criteria: >60 years, ability to provide consent; communicate in English; advanced cancer, heart failure, COPD, other advanced illness or prognosis <12 months. | Type: 3 minute video on CPR and intubation | Primary: CPR and intubation preferences | Intervention patients more likely not to want CPR and intubation; have documented orders for CPR and intubation; documented discussions of preferences; and higher mean knowledge scores |
| Grimaldo et al. 2001 [ | Sample: 185 | Inclusion criteria: English speaking; ≥65 years old; scheduled for elective surgery or overnight stay | Type: Usual care + 5–10 minute anaesthetist led information session focusing on the importance of patient-proxy communication about EoL care. Asked if had an AD and offered DPOA paperwork. | Primary: Increased dialogue between pt and proxies in clinic | Intervention group: |
| Jacobsen et al. 2011 [ | Sample: 899 | Inclusion criteria: stable and unstable seriously | Type: | Primary: | Intervention ward significant better across all outcomes. |
| Meier et al. 1996 [ | Sample: 190 | Inclusion criteria: >65 years, met Medicare Prospective Payment guidelines, complex care problems | Type: Counselling about advance directives and provided opportunity to complete health care proxy, charting of advance directives and proxy forms. | Primary: Documentation: (a) copy of proxy form; (b) patient proxy recorded; (c) advance directive notation | Intervention more likely to complete new proxy or have previously completed proxy identified. |
| Nicolasora 2006 [ | Sample: 297 | Exclusion criteria: cardiac catheterization or admission to ICU; documented dementia or delirium (control); of judged by physician to have impaired cognitive function (intervention) | Type: Script about CPR, mechanical ventilation delivered by physician; asked about CPR status; changes communicated to physician; wishes to prepare ADs and assisted with completing ADs | Primary: Willingness to listen to script; acceptability of information; frequency of changing or choosing CPR status; rate of completion of ADs | 98% willing to discuss CPR and 82% useful |
| Reilly et al. 1995 [ | Sample: 1780 | Inclusion criteria: Not reported | Type: Education phase (Reminders, education and feedback to providers); Intervention phase (Standardised AD documentation form placed in medical charts) | Primary: Frequency and content of ADs documented in charts; | Proportion ADs highest during intervention phase (63% vs 23%E vs 25% C) |
| Sampson et al. 2011 [ | Sample: 33 | Inclusion criteria: Unplanned admission for treatable acute illness; presence of surrogate that was able to provide informed consent. (FAST stage 6d or worse) | Type: Component 1: 30 minute pt assessment and formulation of management plan. | Primary: No. carers with ACP | Seven ACP’s were made in the I group |
| Teno et al. 1997 [ | Sample: 4804 | Inclusion criteria: Presence of diagnosis and ≥18 years of age. | Type: Connors et al. + PSDA mandated pt education and documentation of AD’s | Primary: | Increase in AD documentation in the Post/I group, otherwise the intervention did not affect the pt familiarity with or the use of AD’s. |
| End of life outcomes | |||||
| The SUPPORT Principal Investigators 1995 [ | Sample: 4804 | Inclusion criteria: Presence of diagnosis and ≥18 years of age. | Type: Nurse led intervention: provision of prognostic information to improve communication and decision making. Pt and family EoL preferences elicited and documented. | Primary: | Small improvement in Pt/physician concordance in the group. |
| Costantini et al. 2014 [ | Sample: 308 | Inclusion criteria (wards): 25+ cancer deaths per year, hospital consent, specialist palliative care team. | Type: Liverpool care pathway; training of ward staff and palliative care unit staff; leaflets for family members on emotional and practical issues; audits and feedback; documentation. | Primary: Overall mean score on toolkit after bereavement interview | No difference in overall rating of care. |
| Detering et al. 2010 [ | Sample: 309 | Inclusion criteria: ≥80 years old; admitted under internal medicine, cardiology or respiratory medicine; English. | Type: Received ACP from trained facilitator: multi-disciplinary collaborative approach to ACP; involvement of a surrogate; documentation of EoL care preferences including CPR | Primary: % pts EOL wishes known and respected | More decedents in intervention groups had EoL wishes known and respected compared to control (86% vs 30%) |
| Gade et al. 2008 [ | Sample: 517 | Inclusion criteria: 18+ years, hospitalised with 1+ life-limiting illness, attending physician judgement of prognosis <12 months | Type: Palliative care consultation (IPCS) assessing symptoms, assisting goals of care discussions, discharge planning issues, | Primary: Symptom control, emotional and spiritual support, satisfaction and health care costs | No difference in hospital LOS |
| Hanks et al. 2002 [ | Sample: 261 | Inclusion: All inpatient referrals to palliative care team. | Type: Full-PCT – assessment by specialist doctor/nurse, provision of advice to team verbally and documented, telephone and in-person follow-up. At least weekly reviews, and liaison with community teams post-discharge. | Primary: Symptom control, HrQoL, LOS hospital and rate of re-admission | Improvement over time in scores for all items in FPCT; and smaller improvements in control |
| Sidebottom et al. 2015 [ | Sample: 232 | Inclusion criteria: Acute hearty failure, 18+ years. | Type: PC consult within 24 hour. Differed to usual consult (1) baseline assessment results available to providers; (2) subsequent consults billed to patients. | Primary: Symptom burden, depressive symptoms, quality of life | Intervention: greater reduction in ESAS distress; improvements in SOB, anxiety and tiredness (1 and 3 mths); pain (3 mths only); lower depression score; higher QoL score. |
| Song et al. 2005 [ | Sample: 32 dyads | Inclusion criteria: scheduled for semi-elective surgery in 12 or more hours; had decision-making capacity; >50 years of age; had a surrogate >18 years of age willing to participate. | Type: Patient-Centered Advance Care Planning (PC-ACP) interview (20–45 minutes) by trained nurse: i) representational assessment; ii) exploring concerns planning for future medical decision-making; iii) creating conditions for conceptual change; iv) disease-specific statement of treatment preferences; v) summary. | Primary: Congruence (measured over 3 scenarios) | Intervention group had significantly higher congruence and lower decisional conflict |