| Literature DB >> 35073180 |
Alexander Kremling1, Claudia Bausewein2, Carsten Klein3, Eva Schildmann2, Christoph Ostgathe3, Kerstin Ziegler4, Jan Schildmann1.
Abstract
Background: Terminology concerning sedation in palliative care is heterogeneous, vague, and difficult to apply with negative impact on the reliability of quantitative data, practice, and ethical discourse. Design: To clarify the concept, we systematically developed definitions of core terms in an interdisciplinary research group comprising palliative care, ethics, law, and philosophy, integrating feedback from external experts.Entities:
Keywords: definition; palliative sedation; sedation; terminology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35073180 PMCID: PMC9081045 DOI: 10.1089/jpm.2021.0428
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Palliat Med ISSN: 1557-7740 Impact factor: 2.947
FIG. 1.Process diagram.
Terminology for Sedation in Palliative Care (Expression to be Defined—Definiendum, Defining Expressions—Definiens)
| Expression to be defined | Defining expressions |
|---|---|
| Reduced consciousness | Consciousness scoring <0 on the RASS-PAL scale ( = below normal alertness)[ |
| Sedated | Consciousness reduced by medical means |
| Sedating | Inducing a state of reduced consciousness by medical means |
| Sedation | Result or process of sedating |
| Intentional sedation | Result or process of sedating a patient as a means of achieving a previously defined treatment goal |
| Lightly sedated | Consciousness reduced by medical means to a score of −1 to −2 on the RASS-PAL scale |
| Deeply sedated | Consciousness reduced by a medical measure to a point of ≤−3 on the RASS-PAL scale |
| Temporarily sedated | Patient is sedated only for a certain period of time |
| Sedated until death | Patient is sedated continuously until his/her death |
RASS-PAL, Richmond Agitation-Sedation Scale modified for palliative care inpatients.