• Crit Care Nurs Clin North Am · Dec 2001

    Critical caring. Promoting good end-of-life care in the intensive care unit.

    • P Nelson-Marten, J Braaten, and N K English.
    • School of Nursing, University of Colorado Health Sciences Center, Denver, Colorado, USA. paula.nelson-marten@uchsc.edu
    • Crit Care Nurs Clin North Am. 2001 Dec 1;13(4):577-85.

    AbstractChanging the culture in the ICU to include palliative care interventions along with curative interventions is already underway. Further work is needed, however. This is a role for the critical care nurse. Critical care nurses can be involved in research and education to enhance their future practice in end-of-life care. Research to establish evidence-based protocols for use in patients who require palliative care in the ICU needs to be done. Critical care nurses can prepare themselves for carrying or dying patients by attending palliative care seminars and continuing education courses or by taking a short clinical sabbatical or internship in a local hospice to observe and help give end-of-life care. Hospice nurses can be invited to the ICU to give inservice sessions and to help nurses and other staff understand the transition to dying, including the services that need to be offered to the patient and the family. Nurses from the hospital palliative care team can consult and be available for follow-up. Promoting good end-of-life care should be a goal for all intensive care nurses and critical care units. This goal is reached one patient at a time.

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