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Palliative medicine · Dec 2020
End-of-life care for homeless people in shelter-based nursing care settings: A retrospective record study.
- Sophie I van Dongen, Hanna T Klop, Bregje D Onwuteaka-Philipsen, Anke Je de Veer, Marcel T Slockers, Igor R van Laere, Agnes van der Heide, and Judith Ac Rietjens.
- Department of Public Health, Erasmus University Medical Center, Rotterdam, The Netherlands.
- Palliat Med. 2020 Dec 1; 34 (10): 1374-1384.
BackgroundHomeless people experience multiple health problems and early mortality. In the Netherlands, they can get shelter-based end-of-life care, but shelters are predominantly focused on temporary accommodation and recovery.AimTo examine the characteristics of homeless people who reside at the end-of-life in shelter-based nursing care settings and the challenges in the end-of-life care provided to them.DesignA retrospective record study using both quantitative and qualitative analysis methods.Setting/ParticipantsTwo Dutch shelter-based nursing care settings. We included 61 homeless patients who died between 2009 and 2016.ResultsMost patients had somatic (98%), psychiatric (84%) and addiction problems (90%). For 75% of the patients, the end of life was recognised and documented; this occurred 0-1253 days before death. For 26%, a palliative care team was consulted in the year before death. In the three months before death, 45% had at least three transitions, mainly to hospitals. Sixty-five percent of the patients died in the shelter, 27% in a hospital and 3% in a hospice. A quarter of all patients were known to have died alone. Documented care difficulties concerned continuity of care, social and environmental safety, patient-professional communication and medical-pharmacological alleviation of suffering.ConclusionsEnd-of-life care for homeless persons residing in shelter-based nursing care settings is characterised and challenged by comorbidities, uncertain prognoses, complicated social circumstances and many transitions to other settings. Multilevel end-of-life care improvements, including increased interdisciplinary collaboration, are needed to reduce transitions and suffering of this vulnerable population at the end of life.
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