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The Impact of Pediatric Palliative Care Involvement in the Care of Critically Ill Patients without Complex Chronic Conditions. | LitMetric

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Article Abstract

The impact of pediatric palliative care (PPC) is well established for children with chronic complex diseases. However, PPC likely also benefits previously healthy children with acute life-threatening conditions. To determine the incidence and impact of PPC for previously healthy patients who died in a pediatric hospital. Retrospective chart review of all pediatric deaths over four years. Patients were 0 to 25 years old, died during an inpatient stay at an academic pediatric hospital ≥48 hours after admission, and had no complex chronic conditions (CCCs) before admission. One hundred sixty-seven patients met the eligibility criteria. Most died in intensive care settings ( = 149, 89%), and few ( = 34, 20%) received PPC consultations or services. Patients who received PPC services were more likely to receive a multidisciplinary care conference than did patients without PPC support (70.5% vs. 39.9%;  = 0.001), which also occurred earlier for patients who received PPC services (seven days vs. two days before death;  = 0.04). Most patients had documented end-of-life planning in their medical records; however, this occurred earlier for patients who received PPC consultation (9.5 days before death) than for those who did not (two days before death;  < 0.0001). Patients receiving PPC support (67.7%) were also more likely to have a do-not-resuscitate/intubate order before death than those who did not (39.9%;  = 0.004). Pediatric patients without known CCCs who subsequently die as inpatients benefit from PPC in terms of goals of care discussions and documentation of end-of-life care preferences.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2018.0469DOI Listing

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