Palliative care for cancer patients near end of life in acute-care hospitals across Canada: a look at the inpatient palliative care code.


Journal

Current oncology (Toronto, Ont.)
ISSN: 1718-7729
Titre abrégé: Curr Oncol
Pays: Switzerland
ID NLM: 9502503

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
02 2019
Historique:
entrez: 12 3 2019
pubmed: 12 3 2019
medline: 23 2 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Hospitals play an important role in the care of patients with advanced cancer: nearly half of all cancer deaths occur in acute-care settings. The need for increasing access to palliative care and related support services for patients with cancer in acute-care hospitals is therefore growing. Here, we examine how often and how early in their illness patients with cancer might be receiving palliative care services in the 2 years before their death in an acute-care hospital in Canada. The palliative care code from inpatient administrative databases was used as a proxy for receiving, or being referred for, palliative care. Currently, the palliative care code is the only data element routinely collected from patient charts that allows for the tracking of palliative care activity at a pan-Canadian level. Our findings suggest that most patients with cancer who die in an acute-care hospital receive a palliative designation; however, many of those patients are identified as palliative only in their final admission before death. Of the patients who received a palliative designation before their final admission, nearly half were identified as palliative less than 2 months before death. Findings signal that delivery of services within and between jurisdictions is not consistent, that the palliative care needs of some patients are being missed by physicians, and that palliative care is still largely seen as end-of-life care and is not recognized as an integral component of cancer care. Measuring the provision of system-wide palliative care remains a challenge because comprehensive national data about palliative care are not currently reported from all sectors. To advance measurement and reporting of palliative care in Canada, attention should be focused on collecting comparable data from regional and provincial palliative care programs that individually capture data about palliative care delivery in all health care sectors.

Identifiants

pubmed: 30853797
doi: 10.3747/co.26.4563
pii: 21_conc_tungfeb_43-47
pmc: PMC6380630
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

43-47

Déclaration de conflit d'intérêts

CONFLICT OF INTEREST DISCLOSURES We have read and understood Current Oncology’s policy on disclosing conflicts of interest, and we declare that we have none.

Références

Palliat Med. 2016 Mar;30(3):224-39
pubmed: 26405109
Palliat Care. 2017 Feb 20;10:1178224216688887
pubmed: 28469439
J Epidemiol Community Health. 2016 Jan;70(1):17-24
pubmed: 26202254
Palliat Med. 2017 Mar;31(3):247-257
pubmed: 27317412
BMJ Open. 2015 Nov 23;5(11):e008753
pubmed: 26597865
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2002 Aug;24(2):106-23
pubmed: 12231127
Healthc Q. 2014;17(3):8-10
pubmed: 25591602

Auteurs

J Tung (J)

Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, Toronto, ON.

J Chadder (J)

Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, Toronto, ON.

D Dudgeon (D)

Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, Toronto, ON.

C Louzado (C)

Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, Toronto, ON.

J Niu (J)

Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, Toronto, ON.

R Rahal (R)

Canadian Partnership Against Cancer, Toronto, ON.

A Sinnarajah (A)

Department of Oncology, Cumming School of Medicine, University of Calgary, Calgary, AB.

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Classifications MeSH