• Int J Nurs Stud · May 2013

    Day-to-day care in palliative sedation: survey of nurses' experiences with decision-making and performance.

    • Jimmy J Arevalo, Judith A Rietjens, Siebe J Swart, Roberto S G M Perez, and Agnes van der Heide.
    • Department of Public Health, Erasmus MC, Rotterdam, The Netherlands. jarevalo@fucsalud.edu.co
    • Int J Nurs Stud. 2013 May 1;50(5):613-21.

    ContextContinuous palliative sedation has been the focus of extensive international debates in the field of end-of-life decision making. Although nurses may be important participants in the performance of continuous palliative sedation, research has focused primarily on the role and experience of physicians. Nurses' experiences differ from that of physicians; they more often describe that continuous palliative sedation is used with the intention of hastening death and to have experienced serious emotional burden. Therefore, it is important to understand the experience of nurses in continuous palliative sedation.ObjectiveTo describe nurses' experiences with the decision-making and performance of continuous palliative sedation in terminally ill patients.MethodsCross-sectional study. In 2008, a structured questionnaire was sent to 576 nurses in six professional home care organizations, ten units for palliative care in nursing homes and in-patient hospices and seven hospitals in the western region of the Netherlands. Respondents provided information about the last patient receiving continuous palliative sedation whom they had cared for.ResultsTwo-hundred seventy-seven questionnaires were returned and 199 (71.84%) reported a case of continuous palliative sedation. Nurses felt involved in the decision to use sedation in 84% of cases, albeit to a lesser extent in home care (68.75%, p=0.002). They agreed with the performance of continuous palliative sedation in 95.97% of cases and they proposed the use of continuous palliative sedation in 16.16%. Nurses were present at the start of sedation in 81.40% of cases and reported physicians to be present in 45.22%. In 72.77%, arrangements had been made among caregivers about the coordination of health care regarding the sedation.ConclusionNurses seem to play an important role in the use of continuous sedation. This role is mainly supportive toward physicians and patients during the decision-making process, but shifts to an active performance of sedation, particularly in settings where they explicitly participate as members of a team. Nurses could develop the practice of palliative sedation by anticipating procedural obstacles in the performance of continuous palliative sedation. We recommend them to become more active participants in the decision-making to improve the care of patients receiving continuous palliative sedation.Copyright © 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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