The American journal of hospice & palliative care
-
Am J Hosp Palliat Care · Sep 1997
Factors contributing to late hospice admission and proposals for change.
Hospice seeks to provide high-quality, holistic end-of-life care. Most insurances will reimburse hospice care for a period of six to seven months. However, the majority of patients are not referred to hospice until they are very close to death. The purpose of this study was to examine characteristics of an urban hospice program that may be associated with inordinately late admission to hospice care. ⋯ The study shows that most patients were referred to this urban hospice program when they were very close to death. Three characteristics may contribute to this underutilization of the hospice benefit: (1) the large representation of African-Americans, (2) the high enrollment of patients with non-cancer diseases, and (3) the high number of referrals from acute care hospitals/specialists. Initiatives to overcome barriers to hospice care for minority populations, to better prognosticate terminal illnesses, and to educate physicians and patients about palliative care are needed so that more patients can benefit more fully from hospice care at the end of life.
-
Am J Hosp Palliat Care · Mar 1997
Case ReportsNebulized morphine for paroxysmal cough and dyspnea in a nursing home resident with metastatic cancer.
Nursing homes continue to be challenged with the task of caring for patients in various stages of disease. Historically, the death of a long-term care patient in this setting is not unusual; however, researchers and clinicians are focusing increasingly on the quality of life at the end of life, regardless of location. The long-term care facility is an ideal setting in which to begin to effectively address these issues, especially as individual patients in need present for care. ⋯ Additional, we presented its practical use in a frail, elderly nursing home resident admitted with end-stage metastatic breast carcinoma. The geriatric adage of "start low, and go slow" was effectively borne out in the management of this resident's most difficult symptoms, shortness of breath and paroxysmal cough leading to symptomatic atrial fibrillation. The key to the management of the frail elderly patient goes beyond " start low and go slow" to "aggressively titrate as needed but no further" in order to meet the needs of the individual patient and avoids unwanted side effects.