1 / 84

Care at the End of Life

11. Lecture Note PowerPoint Presentation. Care at the End of Life. LEARNING OUTCOME 1. Describe the role of the nurse in providing quality end-of-life care for older persons and their families. Nurses’ Unique Qualifications to Provide End-of-Life Care. Holistic view Comprehensive

Télécharger la présentation

Care at the End of Life

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. 11 Lecture Note PowerPoint Presentation Care at the End of Life

  2. LEARNING OUTCOME 1 Describe the role of the nurse in providing quality end-of-life care for older persons and their families.

  3. Nurses’ Unique Qualifications to Provide End-of-Life Care • Holistic view • Comprehensive • Effective • Compassionate • Cost effective

  4. Nurses’ Involvement in End-of-Life Care • Spend the most time with patients and their family members at the end-of- life than any other member of the healthcare team • Provide education, support, and guidance throughout the dying process

  5. Nurses’ Involvement in End-of-Life Care • Advocate for improved quality of life for the person with serious illness • Attend to physical, emotional, psychosocial, and spiritual needs of the patient

  6. Nurses Who Help the Patient Die Comfortably and With Dignity Provide the Following Benefits of Good Nursing Care: • Attend to pain and symptom control • Relieve psychosocial distress • Coordinate care across settings with high-quality communication between healthcare providers • Prepare the patient and family for death

  7. Nurses Who Help the Patient Die Comfortably and With Dignity Provide the Following Benefits of Good Nursing Care: • Clarify and communicate goals of treatment and values • Provide support and education during the decision-making process, including the benefits and burdens of treatment

  8. Nurses Who Care for the Dying • Are well educated • Have appropriate supports in the clinical setting • Develop close collaborative partnerships with hospice and palliative care service providers

  9. Nurses Who Care for the Dying • Must be confident in their clinical skills • Are aware of the ethical, spiritual, and legal issues they may confront while providing end-of-life care

  10. Nurses Need to be Aware of Personal Feelings About Death • Improves ability to meet holistic needs of the patient and family • Clarifies one’s own beliefs and values

  11. Meaning of Hope Shifts • From striving for cure to achieving relief from pain and suffering • No “right” or “correct” way to die: It's everybody's right to live independent and die with dignity

  12. Table 11-1Questions and Critical Thinking in Preparation to Care for Dying Patients

  13. LEARNING OUTCOME 2 Recognize changes in demographics, economics, and service delivery that require improved nursing interventions at the end of life.

  14. Changing Statistics • Primary cause of death • 10 leading causes of death account for 80% of all deaths in the United States • Heart disease • Malignant neoplasms • Cerebrovascular disease • Chronic lower respiratory disease • Accidents • Diabetes mellitus

  15. Changing Statistics • Primary cause of death • 10 leading causes of death account for 80% of all deaths in the United States • Influenza • Pneumonia • Alzheimer’s disease • Renal disease • Septicemia

  16. Changing Statistics • Demographic trends • Today, more deaths occur at home • The average life span is 77.9 years compared to only 50 in 1900 • the average life expectancy in Jordan is 73.1 • Social trends • Today, caregivers are more likely to be professionals rather than family members

  17. Exact Cause of Death Difficult to Determine in the Older Person • Multiple comorbid conditions (is either the presence of one or more disorders (or diseases) in addition to a primary disease or disorder) • Acute injury added • Unexpected pathology

  18. Most Americans Prefer to Die at Home • 50% die in hospitals • 25% die in long-term-care facilities • 20% die at home or the home of a loved one • 5% die in other settings

  19. Survey Results of Healthcare System Care of Dying People • Excellent: 3% • Very good: 8% • Good: 31% • Fair: 33% • Poor: 25%

  20. Barriers to Quality End-of-Life Care • Failure of healthcare providers to acknowledge the limits of medical technology • Lack of communication among decision makers • Disagreement regarding the goals of care • Failure to implement a timely advance care plan

  21. Barriers to Quality End-of-Life Care • Lack of training about effective means of controlling pain and symptoms • Unwillingness to be honest about a poor prognosis • Discomfort telling bad news • Lack of understanding about the valuable contributions to be made by referral and collaboration with comprehensive hospice or palliative care services

  22. LEARNING OUTCOME 3 Describe how pain and presence of adverse symptoms affect the dying process.

  23. Nurse’s Role in Pain Treatment • Initial and ongoing assessment of levels of pain • Administration of pain medication • Evaluation of effectiveness of pain medication

  24. How Nurses Can Alleviate the Distress Associated with Untreated Pain • Ongoing assessment of levels of pain • Administration of pain medication • Evaluation of the effectiveness of the pain management plan

  25. Negative Outcomes of Pain • Potential to hasten death • Associated with needless suffering at the end of life • People in pain do not eat or drink well • Inability to engage in meaningful conversations with others • Isolation in order to save energy and cope with the pain sensation

  26. Reasons for Undertreatment of Pain • Patient’s inability to communicate due to • Delirium • Dementia • Aphasia (speechless) • Motor weakness • Language barriers

  27. Causes of Inadequate Care at End of Life • Disparity in access to treatment • Insensitivity to cultural differences • Attitudes about death • Attitudes about end-of-life care • African-Americans prefer aggressive life-sustaining treatments • Mexican-Americans, Korean-Americans, and Euro-Americans prefer less aggressive treatment

  28. Causes of Inadequate Care at End of Life • Mistrust of the healthcare system • Pain is subjective and self-report is considered accurate

  29. Pain characteristics in Cognitively-Impaired Older Persons • Moaning or groaning at rest or with movement • Failure to eat, drink, or respond to presence of others • Grimacing or strained facial expressions

  30. Pain Mannerisms in Cognitively-Impaired Older Persons • Guarding or not moving body parts • Resisting care or noncooperation with therapeutic interventions • Rapid heartbeat, diaphoresis, change in vital signs

  31. Pain Treatment Based on Accurate Pain Assessment • Systematic • Ongoing

  32. Patient Questions Regarding Usual Reactions to Pain • Do you usually seek medical help when you believe something is wrong with you? • Where does it hurt the most? • How bad is the pain (may use the facility pain indicator such as smiley face or rate the pain on a scale of 1 to 10) • How would you describe the pain (sharp, dull, shooting)?

  33. Patient Questions Regarding Usual Reactions to Pain • Is the pain accompanied by other troublesome symptoms such as nausea, diarrhea, and so on? • What makes the pain go away? • Are you able to sleep when you are having the pain?

  34. Patient Questions Regarding Usual Reactions to Pain • Does the pain interfere with your other activities? • What do you think is causing the pain? • What have you done to alleviate the pain in the past?

  35. Pain During the Dying Process • Acute • Sudden onset • Usually associated with single cause or event

  36. Pain During the Dying Process • Chronic • Associated with long-term illness • Always present • Varies in intensity • Tolerance to pain develops • Associated factors • Depression • Poor self-care • Decreased quality of life

  37. Pain During the Dying Process • Neuropathic pain • Nerves are damaged • Burning, electrical, or tingling sensations • Deep and severe • Nociceptive pain • Tissue inflammation or damaged tissues • Cardiac ischemia

  38. Pain During the Dying Process • Unrelieved pain during the dying process • Hastens death • Increases physiological stress • Diminishes immuno-competency • Decreases mobility • Increases myocardial oxygen requirements • Causes psychological distress to the patient and family • Suffering • Spiritual distress

  39. LEARNING OUTCOME 4 Identify the diverse settings for end-of-life care and the role of the nurse in each setting.

  40. Palliative Care • Philosophy of care • Highly structured system for care delivery

  41. Emphasis of Supportive Care During the Dying and Bereavement Process • Quality of life • Living a full life up until moment of death

  42. Palliative Care Settings • Hospitals • Outpatient clinics • Long-term-care facilities • Home

  43. Hospice Care • Focuses on the whole person • Mind • Body • Spirit • Support and care • Patients • Family and caregivers • Continues after death of a loved one

  44. Hospice Care • Multidisciplinary team of professional caregivers • Nurse • Manages pain and controls symptoms • Assesses patient and family abilities to cope • Identifies available resources for patient care • Recognizes patient wishes • Assures that support systems are in place

  45. Hospice Care • Multidisciplinary team of professional caregivers • Physician • Pharmacist • Social workers • Others • Last phase (6 months) of incurable disease • Live as fully and comfortably as possible

  46. Hospice Settings • Freestanding • Hospital • Home health agencies with home care hospice • Home • Nursing home or other long-term-care settings

  47. LEARNING OUTCOME 5 Explore pharmacological and alternative methods of treating pain.

  48. Administer Pain Medication Routinely • Prevent breakthrough pain and suffering • Long-acting drugs provide consistent relief • Chronic pain • Short-acting or immediate release agents for prn use • Acute pain

  49. Anticipate and Treat Adverse Effects of Pain Medication • Nausea • Constipation

  50. Pain Control at the End of Life • Non-opioids for mild to moderate pain • Acetaminophen • NSAIDs

More Related