Cancer Decedents' Hospital End-of-Life Care Documentation: A Retrospective Review of Patient Records.

IF 1.3 4区 医学 Q4 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES
L Russell, R Howard, M Street, C E Johnson, D Berry, E Flemming-Judge, S Brean, L William, J Considine
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Abstract

Objective: International standards of end-of-life care (EOLC) intend to guide the delivery of safe and high-quality EOLC. Adequately documented care is conducive to higher quality of care, but the extent to which EOLC standards are documented in hospital medical records is unknown. Assessing which EOLC standards are documented in patients' medical records can help identify areas that are performed well and areas where improvements are needed. This study assessed cancer decedents' EOLC documentation in hospital settings. Methods: Medical records of 240 cancer decedents were retrospectively evaluated. Data were collected across six Australian hospitals between 1/01/2019 and 31/12/2019. EOLC documentation related to Advance Care Planning (ACP), resuscitation planning, care of the dying person, and grief and bereavement care was reviewed. Chi-square tests assessed associations between EOLC documentation and patient characteristics, and hospital settings (specialist palliative care unit, sub-acute/rehabilitation care settings, acute care wards, and intensive care units). Results: Decedents' mean age was 75.3 years (SD 11.8), 52.0% (n = 125) were female, and 73.7% lived with other adults or carers. All patients (n = 240; 100%) had documentation for resuscitation planning, 97.6% (n = 235) for Care for the Dying Person, 40.0% for grief and bereavement care (n = 96), and 30.4% (n = 73) for ACP. Patients living with other adults or carers were less likely to have a documented ACP than those living alone or with dependents (OR 0.48; 95% CI 0.26-0.89). EOLC documentation was significantly greater in specialist palliative care settings than that in other hospital settings (P < .001). Conclusion: The process of dying is well documented among inpatients diagnosed with cancer. ACP and grief and bereavement support are not documented enough. Organizational endorsement of a clear practice framework and increased training could improve documentation of these aspects of EOLC.
癌症死者的医院临终关怀文件:病人记录的回顾性审查。
目的:国际临终关怀标准旨在指导提供安全、高质量的临终关怀。充分记录的护理有助于提高护理质量,但EOLC标准在医院医疗记录中的记录程度尚不清楚。评估哪些EOLC标准记录在患者的医疗记录中,可以帮助确定哪些方面表现良好,哪些方面需要改进。本研究评估了医院环境中癌症患者的EOLC记录。方法:对240例癌症患者的病历进行回顾性分析。数据是在2019年1月1日至2019年12月31日期间在澳大利亚六家医院收集的。我们回顾了EOLC有关预先护理计划(ACP)、复苏计划、临终者护理以及悲痛和丧亲护理的文件。卡方检验评估了EOLC记录和患者特征以及医院环境(专科姑息治疗单位、亚急性/康复治疗单位、急性护理病房和重症监护单位)之间的关联。结果:死者平均年龄75.3岁(SD 11.8), 52.0% (n = 125)为女性,73.7%与其他成人或照顾者生活在一起。所有患者(n = 240;100%)有复苏计划文件,97.6% (n = 235)有临终者护理文件,40.0%有悲伤和丧亲护理文件(n = 96), 30.4% (n = 73)有ACP文件。与其他成年人或照顾者生活在一起的患者比独居或有家属生活的患者更不可能有记录的ACP (or 0.48;95% ci 0.26-0.89)。专科姑息治疗机构的EOLC记录显著高于其他医院机构(P结论:癌症住院患者的死亡过程有很好的记录。ACP和悲痛和丧亲支持没有足够的文件记录。组织认可明确的实践框架和增加培训可以改进EOLC这些方面的文件。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Journal of Palliative Care
Journal of Palliative Care 医学-卫生保健
CiteScore
3.20
自引率
5.90%
发文量
63
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Palliative Care is a quarterly, peer-reviewed, international and interdisciplinary forum for practical, critical thought on palliative care and palliative medicine. JPC publishes high-quality original research, opinion papers/commentaries, narrative and humanities works, case reports/case series, and reports on international activities and comparative palliative care.
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