HX2.1 Care of the Dying Flashcards
What are the leading causes of death?
- Circulatory Disease
- Cancer
- Other
- Resp
- Injury and Poisoning
What influences a persons fear/acceptance of death?
Culture/Society
Family
Religion
What is a good death?
Paradoxical
Different for different people
What are the element of quality in end of life care?
Care related to symptoms and personal care
–Pain and symptom control, being clean
Being prepared for death
–Having affairs in order, believing family is ready
Achieving a sense of completion
–Resolving unfinished business
Being treated as a whole person
–Maintaining dignity, not dying alone
Relating to family, society, care providers and the transcendent
–Coming to peace with God
What is the central principle of end of life care?
Treat people, not pathology
What are the elements that make up the whole person?
Physical
Psychological
Social
Spiritual
Why is Dx of dying important? When does dying begin?
Needed for end of life care to begin.
Probably when we are diagnosed with incurable illness but important to focus on living after dx made i.e. Living up to the second you die.
What are the consequences of failing to Dx dying?
- Negative consequences for pt, family, professionals
- Uncontrolled symptoms
- Inappropriate treatment plans – including CPR
- Conflicting messages
- Loss of trust, dissatisfaction, formal complaints
- Team disharmony
Who diagnoses the dying?
Multi-disciplinary team decision
What are the steps to be taken after a patient has been dx as dying?
- Document diagnosis
- Communicate diagnosis to patient
- Agree goal of care and ceiling of care with patient
What principle governs the key decisions in promoting symptom management/quality of life? Give examples of some of these key decisions?
Benefit Vs Burden of interventions
Key Decisions •Palliative chemotherapy •Non-invasive ventilation •Artificial nutrition •IV antibiotics •Do not resuscitate order •Artificial hydration
Describe the common symptom pathway to dying? Whom by?
- Pain
- Breathlessness
- Fatigue
- Terminal secretions
- Delirium
Solano 2005
What are the indications for continuous subcutaneous infusion (CSCI)
- Patient too weak to swallow oral drugs
- Intractable nausea or vomiting
- Severe dysphagia
- Poor GI absorption
What are the advantages of CSCI?
Advantages:
•Constant infusion (no peaks or
troughs)
•Reload once / 24 hrs
•Comfort and confidence (no repeated injections)
•Permits better control of nausea and vomiting
What are the symptoms of a patient dying?
–Increased weakness and immobility –Drowsy/cognitive impairment –Reduced oral intake –Difficulty taking meds –Gaunt appearance –Less able to converse