• J Palliat Care · Jan 1992

    Palliative care--could your patient have been managed at home?

    • S Lubin.
    • Department of Family Practice, University Hospital, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
    • J Palliat Care. 1992 Jan 1;8(2):18-22.

    AbstractPalliative care, supportive care of the dying, is rapidly changing to better meet the needs of the patients and families. If palliative care is provided in the home rather than in hospital, there is a potential for improvement in the quality of life for patients and their families and a potential for cost reduction in the health care system. Our study was undertaken to determine whether or not palliative care patients admitted to University Hospital could have been cared for at home rather than in the hospital. The hospital charts of 96 palliative care patients were reviewed retrospectively. The results indicated that 61% of these palliative care patients did not receive any palliative care at home and that 94% died in an acute care hospital setting. Only 18% lived in a setting other than their own home, and 68% had a spouse or other family member living with them at the time of their final admission. Based on the level of support in the place of residence prior to final admission and the reasons for admission, we determined that many of the patients could have been managed at home for at least some of the palliative care period if appropriate support from a home care team had been available.

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