Review article: Goals‐of‐care discussions for adult patients nearing end of life in emergency departments: A systematic review
Autor: | Diane Horrigan, Jennifer Hanning, Amber Mills, Michele Levinson, Katherine J Walker |
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Rok vydání: | 2019 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Physician-Patient Relations Terminal Care medicine.medical_specialty Palliative care Referral business.industry Communication MEDLINE 030208 emergency & critical care medicine PsycINFO CINAHL Patient Care Planning 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Patient satisfaction Systematic review Family medicine Health care Emergency Medicine medicine Humans 030212 general & internal medicine Emergency Service Hospital business |
Zdroj: | Emergency Medicine Australasia. 31:525-532 |
ISSN: | 1742-6723 1742-6731 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1742-6723.13303 |
Popis: | Goals-of-care discussions at end-of-life are associated with increased patient satisfaction and reduced treatment burdens, reduced family and healthcare worker distress and healthcare costs, while achieving equal life-expectancy. It is unclear how goals-of-care discussions should occur. The objective of the study was to determine which patients could benefit, requirements, content, documentation, and harms and benefits of emergency medicine goals-of-care discussions. We sought primary evidence on goals-of-care discussions in EDs with adult patients nearing end-of-life, published in English after 1989. Data sources included Medline, Embase, PsycINFO, CINAHL, Web of Science and reference lists of included articles. One thousand nine hundred and twenty abstracts were screened, five articles selected. There was no consensus on the meaning of goals-of-care, which is often confused with advanced care planning and treatment limitation. Emergency clinicians can identify most patients needing discussions following training. There was no evidence for how to involve stakeholders, nor how to adapt conversations to meet cultural and linguistically diverse needs. Expert panels have suggested requirements and content for conversations with little supporting evidence. There was no evidence for how emergency conversations differ to those in other settings, nor for harms or benefits for holding goals-of-care conversations in EDs. Increased ED goals-of-care conversations increased hospice referral and reduced in-patient admissions. Most studies were of moderate quality only, outcomes were not standardised and sample sizes were small. 'Goals-of-care' is used inconsistently across the literature. This is the first systematic review regarding goals-of-care discussions in EDs. Further research is needed on all aspects of these conversations. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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