Can primary palliative care education change life-sustaining treatment intensity of older adults at the end of life? A retrospective study

Abstract Background Palliative care education has been carried out in some hospitals and palliative care has gradually developed in mainland China. However, the clinical research is sparse and whether primary palliative care education influence treatment intensity of dying older adults is still unkn...

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Main Authors: Qian Liu, Mingzhao Qin, Jian Zhou, Hui Zheng, Weiping Liu, Qi Shen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-06-01
Series:BMC Palliative Care
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-021-00783-6
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spelling doaj-15005b9bf50b47c9a6a4d70d749f8bdd2021-06-27T11:26:13ZengBMCBMC Palliative Care1472-684X2021-06-012011810.1186/s12904-021-00783-6Can primary palliative care education change life-sustaining treatment intensity of older adults at the end of life? A retrospective studyQian Liu0Mingzhao Qin1Jian Zhou2Hui Zheng3Weiping Liu4Qi Shen5Department of Geriatrics, Beijing Tongren Hospital, Capital Medical UniversityDepartment of Geriatrics, Beijing Tongren Hospital, Capital Medical UniversityDepartment of Geriatrics, Beijing Tongren Hospital, Capital Medical UniversityDepartment of Geriatrics, Beijing Tongren Hospital, Capital Medical UniversityDepartment of Geriatrics, Beijing Tongren Hospital, Capital Medical UniversityDepartment of Geriatrics, Beijing Tongren Hospital, Capital Medical UniversityAbstract Background Palliative care education has been carried out in some hospitals and palliative care has gradually developed in mainland China. However, the clinical research is sparse and whether primary palliative care education influence treatment intensity of dying older adults is still unknown. This study aims to explore the changes to the intensity of end-of-life care in hospitalized older adults before and after the implementation of primary palliative care education. Methods A retrospective study was conducted. Two hundred three decedents were included from Beijing Tongren Hospital’s department of geriatrics between January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2019. Patients were split into two cohorts with regards to the start of palliative care education. Patient demographics and clinical characteristics as well as analgesia use, medical resources use and provision of life-sustaining treatments were compared. We used a chi-square test to compare categorical variables, a t test to compare continuous variables with normal distributions and a Mann–Whitney U test for continuous variables with skewed distributions. Results Of the total participants in the study, 157(77.3%) patients were male. The median age was 88 (interquartile range; Q1-Q3 83–93) and the majority of patients (N = 172, 84.7%) aged 80 years or older. The top 3 causes of death were malignant solid tumor (N = 74, 36.5%), infectious disease (N = 74, 36.5%), and cardiovascular disease (N = 23, 11.3%). Approximately two thirds died of non-cancer diseases. There was no significant difference in age, gender, cause of death and functional status between the two groups (p > 0.05). After primary palliative care education, pain controlling drugs were used more (p < 0.05), fewer patients received electric defibrillation, bag mask ventilation and vasopressors (p < 0.05). There was no change in the length of hospitalization, intensive care admissions, polypharmacy, use of broad-spectrum antibiotics, blood infusions, albumin infusions, nasogastric/nasoenteric tubes, parenteral nutrition, renal replacement and mechanical ventilation (p > 0.05). Conclusions Primary palliative care education may promotes pain controlling drug use and DNR implementation. More efforts should be put on education about symptom assessment, prognostication, advance care planning, code status discussion in order to reduce acute medical care resource use and apply life-sustaining treatment appropriately.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-021-00783-6Primary palliative careEnd-of-lifeOlder adultsLife-sustaining treatmentEducation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Qian Liu
Mingzhao Qin
Jian Zhou
Hui Zheng
Weiping Liu
Qi Shen
spellingShingle Qian Liu
Mingzhao Qin
Jian Zhou
Hui Zheng
Weiping Liu
Qi Shen
Can primary palliative care education change life-sustaining treatment intensity of older adults at the end of life? A retrospective study
BMC Palliative Care
Primary palliative care
End-of-life
Older adults
Life-sustaining treatment
Education
author_facet Qian Liu
Mingzhao Qin
Jian Zhou
Hui Zheng
Weiping Liu
Qi Shen
author_sort Qian Liu
title Can primary palliative care education change life-sustaining treatment intensity of older adults at the end of life? A retrospective study
title_short Can primary palliative care education change life-sustaining treatment intensity of older adults at the end of life? A retrospective study
title_full Can primary palliative care education change life-sustaining treatment intensity of older adults at the end of life? A retrospective study
title_fullStr Can primary palliative care education change life-sustaining treatment intensity of older adults at the end of life? A retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed Can primary palliative care education change life-sustaining treatment intensity of older adults at the end of life? A retrospective study
title_sort can primary palliative care education change life-sustaining treatment intensity of older adults at the end of life? a retrospective study
publisher BMC
series BMC Palliative Care
issn 1472-684X
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract Background Palliative care education has been carried out in some hospitals and palliative care has gradually developed in mainland China. However, the clinical research is sparse and whether primary palliative care education influence treatment intensity of dying older adults is still unknown. This study aims to explore the changes to the intensity of end-of-life care in hospitalized older adults before and after the implementation of primary palliative care education. Methods A retrospective study was conducted. Two hundred three decedents were included from Beijing Tongren Hospital’s department of geriatrics between January 1, 2014 to December 31, 2019. Patients were split into two cohorts with regards to the start of palliative care education. Patient demographics and clinical characteristics as well as analgesia use, medical resources use and provision of life-sustaining treatments were compared. We used a chi-square test to compare categorical variables, a t test to compare continuous variables with normal distributions and a Mann–Whitney U test for continuous variables with skewed distributions. Results Of the total participants in the study, 157(77.3%) patients were male. The median age was 88 (interquartile range; Q1-Q3 83–93) and the majority of patients (N = 172, 84.7%) aged 80 years or older. The top 3 causes of death were malignant solid tumor (N = 74, 36.5%), infectious disease (N = 74, 36.5%), and cardiovascular disease (N = 23, 11.3%). Approximately two thirds died of non-cancer diseases. There was no significant difference in age, gender, cause of death and functional status between the two groups (p > 0.05). After primary palliative care education, pain controlling drugs were used more (p < 0.05), fewer patients received electric defibrillation, bag mask ventilation and vasopressors (p < 0.05). There was no change in the length of hospitalization, intensive care admissions, polypharmacy, use of broad-spectrum antibiotics, blood infusions, albumin infusions, nasogastric/nasoenteric tubes, parenteral nutrition, renal replacement and mechanical ventilation (p > 0.05). Conclusions Primary palliative care education may promotes pain controlling drug use and DNR implementation. More efforts should be put on education about symptom assessment, prognostication, advance care planning, code status discussion in order to reduce acute medical care resource use and apply life-sustaining treatment appropriately.
topic Primary palliative care
End-of-life
Older adults
Life-sustaining treatment
Education
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-021-00783-6
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