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Symptom control in advanced chronic liver disease: integrating anticipatory palliative and supportive care

Symptom control in advanced chronic liver disease: integrating anticipatory palliative and supportive care
Symptom control in advanced chronic liver disease: integrating anticipatory palliative and supportive care

The number of patients coming to hospital with liver disease is increasing. There was a worrying trend before the pandemic, and this has intensified. Despite improvements in the management of patients with advanced cirrhosis many patients will die within 6-12 months of first presentation, and, despite this, the field of palliative and supportive care in liver disease is still in its infancy. This is a narrative review. Evidence is often thin in this field. Where it exists it is cited, but much of the commentary here is based on the authors own experience and readers are free to consider it and debate it. Most patients who die of liver disease receive palliative care very late in their illness (if at all). There are many barriers to supportive and palliative care in liver disease which are discussed. Symptom control is often poor because of these barriers. Before symptomatic control can be established, patients in need of it must to be identified and conversations had about the severity of their situation and what their wishes would be. Interest in palliative and supportive care for patients liver disease is growing as is the number of hepatologists and palliative care clinicians within the UK with an interest. It is important that this enthusiasm and interest can be rolled out and scaled up across the UK so that all patients, wherever they are, can benefit. The aims of these articles are first to highlight and bring into focus the unmet need for palliative and supportive care in liver disease and second to provide suggestions for its integration into liver services. Ask yourself the question: where would I start in my hospital to help these patients?

2041-4137
e109-e115
Wright, Mark
43325ef9-3459-4c75-b3bf-cf8d8dac2a21
Woodland, Hazel
aeb359be-51cb-4042-bf91-4197e15f995b
Hudson, Ben
af2f981a-46f9-4f40-bcb8-663f407b2164
Wright, Mark
43325ef9-3459-4c75-b3bf-cf8d8dac2a21
Woodland, Hazel
aeb359be-51cb-4042-bf91-4197e15f995b
Hudson, Ben
af2f981a-46f9-4f40-bcb8-663f407b2164

Wright, Mark, Woodland, Hazel and Hudson, Ben (2022) Symptom control in advanced chronic liver disease: integrating anticipatory palliative and supportive care. Frontline Gastroenterology, 13 (e1), e109-e115. (doi:10.1136/flgastro-2022-102114).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The number of patients coming to hospital with liver disease is increasing. There was a worrying trend before the pandemic, and this has intensified. Despite improvements in the management of patients with advanced cirrhosis many patients will die within 6-12 months of first presentation, and, despite this, the field of palliative and supportive care in liver disease is still in its infancy. This is a narrative review. Evidence is often thin in this field. Where it exists it is cited, but much of the commentary here is based on the authors own experience and readers are free to consider it and debate it. Most patients who die of liver disease receive palliative care very late in their illness (if at all). There are many barriers to supportive and palliative care in liver disease which are discussed. Symptom control is often poor because of these barriers. Before symptomatic control can be established, patients in need of it must to be identified and conversations had about the severity of their situation and what their wishes would be. Interest in palliative and supportive care for patients liver disease is growing as is the number of hepatologists and palliative care clinicians within the UK with an interest. It is important that this enthusiasm and interest can be rolled out and scaled up across the UK so that all patients, wherever they are, can benefit. The aims of these articles are first to highlight and bring into focus the unmet need for palliative and supportive care in liver disease and second to provide suggestions for its integration into liver services. Ask yourself the question: where would I start in my hospital to help these patients?

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 16 May 2022
e-pub ahead of print date: 1 June 2022
Published date: 1 August 2022

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 478601
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/478601
ISSN: 2041-4137
PURE UUID: 7d6eb94c-a60a-43e4-83dd-e0a1cf039192

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Date deposited: 05 Jul 2023 17:24
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 02:13

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Contributors

Author: Mark Wright
Author: Hazel Woodland
Author: Ben Hudson

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