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Arch Pediat Adol Med · Jun 2007
Multicenter StudyPediatric patients receiving palliative care in Canada: results of a multicenter review.
- Kimberley Widger, Dawn Davies, Danielle J Drouin, Laura Beaune, Lysanne Daoust, R Peter Farran, Nago Humbert, Filomena Nalewajek, Marion Rattray, Maria Rugg, and Michelle Bishop.
- Pediatric Palliative Care, IWK Health Centre, Halifax, Nova Scotia. kim.widger@utoronto.ca
- Arch Pediat Adol Med. 2007 Jun 1;161(6):597-602.
ObjectivesTo describe the patients who received care from the 8 dedicated pediatric palliative care programs in Canada in 2002 and to estimate the number of children who may have benefited but did not receive services from these programs.DesignRetrospective review of medical records combined with a survey of each program.SettingSeven pediatric palliative care programs based in tertiary care settings and 1 freestanding children's hospice.ParticipantsThe programs cared for 317 children during 2002, of whom 123 died during that year. An additional 32 children died by the end of 2003.Main ExposurePediatric palliative care program.ResultsNearly half (48.6%) of the patients were younger than 5 years, and almost half of these were younger than 1 year. Primary diagnoses were disorders of the nervous system (39.1%), malignancies (22.1%), and conditions arising in the perinatal period or congenital anomalies (22.1%). Most of the children (43.9%) died at home, with those centers reporting more comprehensive home care services having the highest percentage of home deaths. From a national perspective, between 5% and 12% of the children who could benefit from palliative care received services from 1 of these programs.ConclusionsPediatric palliative care programs in Canada care for a diverse population of patients with a wide range of age and disease conditions. Only a small percentage of children who die, however, receive services from these dedicated programs.
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