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End-of-life care and intensive care unit clinician involvement in a private acute care hospital: A retrospective descriptive medical record audit

Version 3 2024-06-19, 00:41
Version 2 2024-06-04, 07:30
Version 1 2020-12-23, 16:21
journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-19, 00:41 authored by A King, Mari BottiMari Botti, DP McKenzie, J Barrett, Melissa BloomerMelissa Bloomer
Introduction: More Australians die in the hospital than in any other setting. This study aimed to (i) evaluate the quality of end-of-life (EOL) care in the hospital against an Australian National Standard, (ii) describe the characteristics of intensive care unit (ICU) clinician involvement in EOL care, and (iii) explore the demographic and clinical factors associated with quality of EOL care. Method: A retrospective descriptive medical record audit was conducted on 297 adult inpatients who died in 2017 in a private acute care hospital in Melbourne, Australia. Data collected related to 20 ‘Processes of Care’, considered to contribute to the quality of EOL care. The decedent sample was separated into three cohorts as per ICU clinician involvement. Results: The median age of the sample was 81 (25the75th percentile ¼ 72e88) years. The median tally for EOL care quality was 16 (25the75th percentile ¼ 13e17) of 20 care processes. ICU clinicians were involved in 65.7% (n ¼ 195) of cases; however, contact with the ICU outreach team or an ICU admission during the final inpatient stay was negatively associated with quality of EOL care (coefficient ¼ 1.51 and 2.07, respectively). Longer length of stay was positively associated with EOL care (coefficient ¼ .05). Specialist palliative care was involved in 53% of cases, but this was less likely for those admitted to the ICU (p < .001). Evidence of social support, bereavement follow-up, and religious support were low across all cohorts. Conclusion: Statistically significant differences in the quality of EOL care and a negative association between ICU involvement and EOL care quality suggest opportunities for ICU outreach clinicians to facilitate discussion of care goals and the appropriateness of ICU admission. Advocating for inclusion of specialist palliative care and nonclinical support personnel in EOL care has merit. Future research is necessary to investigate the relationship between ICU intervention and EOL care quality.

History

Alternative title

End-of-life care and ICU clinician involvement in a private acute care hospital: A retrospective descriptive medical record audit

Journal

Australian Critical Care

Volume

34

Pagination

452-459

Location

Australia

Open access

  • Yes

ISSN

1036-7314

eISSN

1878-1721

Language

English

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

5

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC