Literature DB >> 29771351

Burn Surgeon and Palliative Care Physician Attitudes Regarding Goals of Care Delineation for Burned Geriatric Patients.

Holly B Cunningham1, Shannon A Scielzo2, Paul A Nakonezny3, Brandon R Bruns4, Karen J Brasel5, Kenji Inaba6, Scott C Brakenridge7, Jeffrey D Kerby8, Bellal A Joseph9, M J Mohler9, Joseph Cuschieri10, Mary E Paulk2, Akpofure P Ekeh11, Tarik D Madni1, Luis R Taveras1, Jonathan B Imran1, Steven E Wolf12, Herb A Phelan1.   

Abstract

Palliative care specialists (PCS) and burn surgeons (BS) were surveyed regarding: 1) importance of goals of care (GoC) conversations for burned seniors; 2) confidence in their own specialty's ability to conduct these conversations; and 3) confidence in the ability of the other specialty to do so. A 13-item survey was developed by the steering committee of a multicenter consortium dedicated to palliative care in the injured geriatric patient and beta-tested by BS and PCS unaffiliated with the consortium. The finalized instrument was electronically circulated to active physician members of the American Burn Association and American Academy for Hospice and Palliative Medicine. Forty-five BS (7.3%) and 244 PCS (5.7%) responded. Palliative physicians rated being more familiar with GoC, were more comfortable having a discussion with laypeople, were more likely to have reported high-quality training in performing conversations, believed more palliative specialists were needed in intensive care units, and had more interest in conducting conversations relative to BS. Both groups believed themselves to perform GoC discussions better than the other specialty perceived them to do so. BS favored leading team discussions, whereas palliative specialists preferred jointly led discussions. Both groups agreed that discussions should occur within 72 hours of admission. Both groups believe themselves to conduct GoC discussions for burned seniors better than the other specialty perceived them to do so, which led to disparate views on perceptions for the optimal leadership of these discussions.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2018        PMID: 29771351      PMCID: PMC6454520          DOI: 10.1093/jbcr/iry027

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Burn Care Res        ISSN: 1559-047X            Impact factor:   1.845


  21 in total

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9.  Long-term outcome of critically ill elderly patients requiring intensive care.

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