1 / 31

End of life care Barbro Norrström MD, Senior Consultant in Oncology Diploma in Palliative Medicine

The INCTR First Symposium on Pediatric & Adolescent oncology Addis Ababa, Ethiopia January 18 – 21 2011. End of life care Barbro Norrström MD, Senior Consultant in Oncology Diploma in Palliative Medicine ASIH Långbro Park, (Advanced Palliative Home & Hospice Care Stockholm, Sweden)

wayde
Télécharger la présentation

End of life care Barbro Norrström MD, Senior Consultant in Oncology Diploma in Palliative Medicine

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The INCTR First Symposium on Pediatric & Adolescent oncology Addis Ababa, Ethiopia January 18 – 21 2011 End of life care Barbro Norrström MD, Senior Consultant in Oncology Diploma in Palliative Medicine ASIH Långbro Park, (Advanced Palliative Home & Hospice Care Stockholm, Sweden) 21st of January 2011

  2. PALLIATIVE CARE is a HUMAN RIGHT • Early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of physical, psychosocial and spiritual problems • AVOID Suffering • Palliative care is an essential part of cancer control • Palliative care neither hastens nor postpones death • ref http://www.who.int/cancer/palliative/en/

  3. What end of life care involves and when it starts • Support when death is approaching. • To be as comfortable as possible by relieving pain and other distressing symptoms. • ”Cure is rare but comfort is always there” (ref KEPCA) • Multiprofessional approach

  4. EoL Care in children vs adults • Cancer • Non cancer • Differencies in disease trajectory • Differencies in prognostication EoL • Communication – sometimes by proxy • Barriers in pediatric EOL Care by the professionals

  5. Trust and supportis basic

  6. TRANSITIONS at EoL • Week by week • Day by day • Hour by hour • Minute by minute • Assess symptoms regulary • Mechanism based treatment • Ref ; Twycross; ”Rule of threes”

  7. Care and support to the dying patient • Physical, emotional and spiritual comfort – respect for beliefs • Support patient and family and find out their wishes • Family involved in the physical, emotional and spiritual care • Support good communication • ”Prepare for the worst & hope for the best” • Care should be dignified

  8. Breaking Bad News in EoL • Aquire all information possible • Plan & Set the context • Warning ”shot” • Find out how much is known & what is wanted to be known • Respond to patient´s & family´s reactions • Repeat & check if understood correctly

  9. Breaking Bad News cont • More information asked for? • Concerns- emotions? • Follow up & immediate plan • Next step - supportive and reassuring of follow up • Make certain of knowledge of how to access professional support

  10. Signs of EOL approaching • Vital signs deteriorating • Surroundings no longer of interest • Loss of appetite and fluid intake • Decreased interaction with others • Periods of sleep increases • Withdrawal

  11. End of life care - symptoms & signs • Progressive weakness • Disorientated now and then or reduced cognition • In need of support with care • Bedridden • Exclude reversible cause- ie medication, hypercalcemia, infection

  12. Most common symptoms in the last hours of life • Breathlessness • Noisy,irregular breathing • Agitation/ restlessness • Uncontrolled pain • Myoclonic jerks • Nausea, vomiting

  13. Breathlessness • Dyspnoe • If possible treat reversible cause • Anxiety • Opioids if available • Oxygen if hypoxic if available • Bensodiazepines if available • Do not leave the patient

  14. ”Death Rattle” or gurgling sounds • Changes in breathing • Irregular breathing; Cheyne Stoke breathing • Noisy breathing; gurgling or rattling sounds • These gurgling sounds can be upsetting for next of kin

  15. Confusion & Disturbed Sleep • Drowsiness • Disorientated • Hallucinating/Agitation • Sleep disturbances • Assess and review medical treatment • Worrying for family

  16. Controlling pain • 75 % of cancer patients experience pain • Not everyone dying of cancer has pain • Assess pain control and mechanism of pain • Other routes for control of pain than oral? • Myoclonic jerks

  17. Progressive weakness • Physical changes • Cachexia • Muscle atrophia • Bed bound • Development of pressure sores • Feeling of weakness

  18. Loss of bladder or bowel control • Darkened urine or decreased amount of urine • The dying person may lose control of their bladder and bowel • Can be worrying for next of kin

  19. Decreased need of nutrition and fluid intake & Nausea & Vomiting • If nausea & vomiting-mechanism? • Difficulty in swallowing • Not wanting to eat or drink at all • Patients rarely worry about not eating/drinking • Family do often worry (do NOT force an argument!) • To be comfortable- avoid dry mouth

  20. Skin becomes cool to the touch • Cold feet, hands, arms and legs • Peripheral cirkulation impaired • Changes in colouring of skin

  21. Useful drugs, if available • Opioids • Bensodiazepines • Anticolinergics • Sedatives, neuroleptics • Steroids • NSAIDs • Diuretics

  22. Routes for medication in end of lifecare • Subcutanous- syringe driver (if available) • Rectal • Topical • Intravenous (if a line) • Buccal • Avoid intramuscular

  23. Asses patient & families needs • Spiritual & psychological issues • Focus on patients imminent needs • Review medication • Information to family of symptoms to expect • Maintain patients dignity • LCP- Liverpool care pathway

  24. Liverpool Care Pathway for the Dying Patient (LCP) • The LCP is an integrated care pathway,used at the bedside to drive up sustained quality of the dying in the last hours and days of life. • "Care of the Dying should become a quality performance indicator in support of the governance and performance management framework of all organisations at executive level"John Ellershaw, Clinical Lead - LCP, Professor of Palliative Medicine, University of Liverpool,Director MCPCIL.

  25. What are the signs that the patient has died? • Pulse and breathing do not exist. • No response to touch or when spoken to to • No eye movement. Eyelids may be open. Lack of reflex and dilated pupils • Relaxed jaw and slightly open mouth • Bladder and bowel might be released

  26. Bereavement • Counselling • Respond to grief reactions • Help family accept death • Supportive • Be open to communication • Follow-up with family after their loss

  27. Medication • Breakthrough pain-> 1/6th of the oral opioid dose; If parenteral-> 1/2 or 1/3 of total po dose • If new pain ; assess- mechanism. • Nociceptiv, (opioids, if colic; Hyoscine Butylbromide) • Neuropathic,(tricyclic, gabapentin) • Inflammatory component (NSAID´s, steroids), • Existential (”Total pain – Dame Cisely Saunders”) Anxiolytics ( Midazolam) Neuroleptics (Haloperidol)

  28. Medication continued • Anxiety, agitation: Bensodiazepines ,(Parenteralt Midazolam ) Neuroleptics parenteral; • Breathlessness:opioids, bensodiazepines, oxygen • If rattling, gurgles;Hyoscin Hydrobromide, Hyoscin Butylbromide • Nausea/Vomiting Metoclopramid, Steroids, Hyoscin Butylbromide, Haloperidol

  29. Take home message • Everyone has a right to palliative care • Avoid suffering, optimize symptom control • Respect and support in end of life care • Assess interventions • Stop medication not needed • Multiprofessional approach

  30. Useful weblinks…. • http://www.nhs.uk/Planners/end-of- life-care/Pages/End-of-life-care.aspx • http://www.ipcrc.net/ http://www.palliativemed.org/ • http://www.liv.ac.uk/mcpcil/index.htm • Children`s Palliative Care in Africa ed Justin Amery, Oxford University Press • Perspectives on Palliative Care For Children and Young People – a global discourse- ed R Pfund & S Fowler-Kerry • EAPC- Pediatric Palliative Care

  31. Thank you for listening! Questions?

More Related