BMC palliative care
-
BMC palliative care · Oct 2020
Family experiences with palliative care for children at home: a systematic literature review.
The main goal of pediatric palliative care (PPC) is to improve or maintain the best possible quality of life (QoL) for the child and their family. PPC can be provided in community health centres, within the specialist health care service and/or in the child's home. Home is often the preferred place for families, and recommendations state that, whenever possible, the family home should be the centre of care for the child. The aim of this study is to systematically review the experiences and needs of families with children receiving palliative care at home. ⋯ Families receiving PPC need organised, individualised support from a skilled PPC team. Respite care is necessary in order to manage a demanding home-care situation and parents need support for siblings. Privacy to be a family is a need, and many families need financial support. Future studies should focus on PPC at home in the perspectives of sick children and their siblings.
-
BMC palliative care · Oct 2020
Randomized Controlled TrialMelatonin to prevent delirium in patients with advanced cancer: a double blind, parallel, randomized, controlled, feasibility trial.
Delirium is highly problematic in palliative care (PC). Preliminary data indicate a potential role for melatonin to prevent delirium, but no randomized controlled trials (RCTs) are reported in PC. ⋯ A larger double-blind RCT is feasible, but both subject accrual and withdrawal rates signal a need for multisite collaboration. The apparent trend for shorter time to incident delirium in the melatonin group bodes for careful monitoring in a larger trial.
-
BMC palliative care · Sep 2020
The effect of neuropalliative care on quality of life and satisfaction with quality of care in patients with progressive neurological disease and their family caregivers: an interventional control study.
It is recommended that patients with progressive neurological disease (PND) receive general and specialized palliative care. The purpose of this study was to determine the effect of neuropalliative care on quality of life (QoL) and satisfaction with provided care in both patients with PND in advanced stages of disease and their family caregivers. ⋯ The provision of neuropalliative care to patients with advanced stages of PND helped to maintain and slightly improve their QoL, and symptoms burden, and resulted in a more positive assessment of satisfaction with the quality of care provided.
-
BMC palliative care · Aug 2020
Better quality of end-of-life care for persons with advanced dementia in nursing homes compared to hospitals: a Swedish national register study.
Hospitalisation of patients with advanced dementia is generally regarded as less preferable compared to care at home or in a nursing home. For patients with other diagnoses, young age has been associated with better end-of-life care. However, studies comparing the quality of palliative care for persons with advanced dementia in hospitals and nursing homes are scarce. The aim of this study was to investigate whether quality of end-of-life care for patients with dementia depends on age, gender and place of death. ⋯ Death in hospitals was associated with poorer quality of end-of-life care compared to death in nursing homes. Our data support the importance of advance care planning and individual assessments in nursing homes to avoid referral to hospitals during end of life. Despite established recommendations to avoid hospitalisation if possible, there were strong associations between younger age, male gender and hospitalisation in the end of life. Further studies are needed to investigate the role of socioeconomic factors in end-of-life care for this patient group.
-
BMC palliative care · Aug 2020
Collaborative advance care planning in advanced cancer patients: col-ACP -study - study protocol of a randomised controlled trial.
To assure patient-centred end-of-life care, palliative interventions need to account for patients' preferences. Advance care planning (ACP) is a structured approach that allows patients, relatives and physicians to discuss end-of-life decisions. Although ACP can improve several patient related outcomes, the implementation of ACP remains difficult. The col-ACP-study (collaborative advance care planning) will investigate a new ACP procedure (col-ACP-intervention (German: Hand-in-Hand Intervention)) in palliative cancer patients and their relatives that addresses individual values and targets barriers of communication before an ACP process. ⋯ Augmentation of a regular ACP program by a structured psycho-oncological intervention is an innovative approach to target barriers of communication about end-of-life issues. Study findings will help to understand the value of such a combined intervention in palliative care.