Managing a good death in critical care: can health policy help?
Managing a good death in critical care: can health policy help?
Aim: This paper discusses end-of-life care (EoLC) in critical care through exploration of what is known from the international literature and what is currently presented within UK policy.
Background and context: EoLC is an important international critical care issue, and currently provides a key focus for health care policy in the UK. While society holds that critical care is delivered in a highly technical area with a strong focus on cure and recovery, mortality rates in this speciality remain at approximately 20%. When patient recovery is not an outcome, discussions with patient, family and extended care teams turn towards futility of treatment and end-of-life management. However, there arespecific barriers to overcome in EoLC for the critically ill.
Conclusion: A key issue for EoLC in critical care is a lack of robust systems to prospectively identify individuals who are most at risk of dying. A further challenge is divergent perspectives within and across clinical teams on treatment withdrawal and limitation practices. To streamline patient management and underpin a hospice approach to care, EoLC policies are currently being used within the UK. While this provides a national framework to address some key critical care clinical issues in the UK, there is a need for further refinement of the tool to reflect the reality of EoLC for the critically ill. It is important that international best practice exemplars are examined and clinicians actively engage and contribute to ensure that any local EoLC frameworks are fit for purpose.
dying in critial care, end of life, health care policy, withdrawal of treatment
208-214
Coombs, Maureen
e7424ed2-6beb-481d-8489-83f3595fd04c
Long, Tracy
92a6d1ba-9ec9-43f2-891e-5bfdb5026532
July 2008
Coombs, Maureen
e7424ed2-6beb-481d-8489-83f3595fd04c
Long, Tracy
92a6d1ba-9ec9-43f2-891e-5bfdb5026532
Abstract
Aim: This paper discusses end-of-life care (EoLC) in critical care through exploration of what is known from the international literature and what is currently presented within UK policy.
Background and context: EoLC is an important international critical care issue, and currently provides a key focus for health care policy in the UK. While society holds that critical care is delivered in a highly technical area with a strong focus on cure and recovery, mortality rates in this speciality remain at approximately 20%. When patient recovery is not an outcome, discussions with patient, family and extended care teams turn towards futility of treatment and end-of-life management. However, there arespecific barriers to overcome in EoLC for the critically ill.
Conclusion: A key issue for EoLC in critical care is a lack of robust systems to prospectively identify individuals who are most at risk of dying. A further challenge is divergent perspectives within and across clinical teams on treatment withdrawal and limitation practices. To streamline patient management and underpin a hospice approach to care, EoLC policies are currently being used within the UK. While this provides a national framework to address some key critical care clinical issues in the UK, there is a need for further refinement of the tool to reflect the reality of EoLC for the critically ill. It is important that international best practice exemplars are examined and clinicians actively engage and contribute to ensure that any local EoLC frameworks are fit for purpose.
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Published date: July 2008
Keywords:
dying in critial care, end of life, health care policy, withdrawal of treatment
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Local EPrints ID: 54105
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/54105
ISSN: 1362-1017
PURE UUID: 07ac535d-74aa-4a4b-bae3-324ac926f9bc
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Date deposited: 15 Jul 2008
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 03:24
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Author:
Maureen Coombs
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