Palliative Care for Children with Advanced Cancer

Author(s):  
Michelle Koh ◽  
Finella Craig ◽  
Joanne Wolfe

This chapter on palliative care for children with advanced cancer addresses the challenges of decision making and the care of the child and family. It explores decision making with regards to ongoing treatment, advance-care planning, and the importance of establishing goals of care. The nature and management of common physical and psychological symptoms are examined, in particular pain and the use of opioids and neuropathic adjuvants. Cancer-directed therapies, specific symptom management, and steroids are discussed. The chapter also includes specific issues around the care of the child and family at the end of life, such as feeding, spiritual distress, and ongoing bereavement care. This chapter is aimed at professionals in the multidisciplinary team caring for children in this context.

2019 ◽  
Vol 33 (10) ◽  
pp. 1299-1309 ◽  
Author(s):  
Cheng-Pei Lin ◽  
Catherine J Evans ◽  
Jonathan Koffman ◽  
Shuh-Jen Sheu ◽  
Su-Hsuan Hsu ◽  
...  

Background: The concept of advance care planning is largely derived from Western countries. However, the decision-making process and drivers for choosing palliative care in non-Western cultures have received little attention. Aim: To explore the decision-making processes and drivers of receiving palliative care in advance care planning discussions from perspectives of advanced cancer patients, families and healthcare professionals in northern Taiwan. Method: Semi-structured qualitative interviews with advanced cancer patients, their families and healthcare professionals independently from inpatient oncology and hospice units. Thematic analysis with analytical rigour enhanced by dual coding and exploration of divergent views. Results: Forty-five participants were interviewed ( n = 15 from each group). Three main decision-making trajectories were identified: (1) ‘choose palliative care’ was associated with patients’ desire to reduce physical suffering from treatments, avoid being a burden to families and society, reduce futile treatments and donate organs to help others; (2) ‘decline palliative care’ was associated with patients weighing up perceived benefits to others as more important than benefits for themselves; and (3) ‘no opportunity to choose palliative care’ was associated with lack of opportunities to discuss potential benefits of palliative care, lack of staff skill in end-of-life communication, and cultural factors, notably filial piety. Conclusion: Choice for palliative care among advanced cancer patients in Taiwan is influenced by three decision-making trajectories. Opinions from families are highly influential, and patients often lack information on palliative care options. Strategies to facilitate decision-making require staff confidence in end-of-life discussions, working with the patients and their family while respecting the influence of filial piety.


2016 ◽  
Vol 15 (1) ◽  
pp. 44-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marie Bakitas ◽  
J. Nicholas Dionne-Odom ◽  
Lisa Jackson ◽  
Jennifer Frost ◽  
Margaret F. Bishop ◽  
...  

AbstractObjective:Few decision aids are available for patients with a serious illness who face many treatment and end-of-life decisions. We evaluated the Looking Ahead: Choices for Medical Care When You're Seriously Ill® patient decision aid (PtDA), one component of an early palliative care clinical trial.Method:Our participants included individuals with advanced cancer and their caregivers who had participated in the ENABLE (Educate, Nurture, Advise, Before Life Ends) early palliative care telehealth randomized controlled trial (RCT) conducted in a National Cancer Institute-designated cancer center, a U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs medical center, and affiliated outreach clinics in rural New England. ENABLE included six weekly patient and three weekly family caregiver structured sessions. Participants watched the Looking Ahead PtDA prior to session 3, which covered content on decision making and advance care planning. Nurse coaches employed semistructured interviews to obtain feedback from consecutive patient and caregiver participants approximately one week after viewing the Looking Ahead PtDA program (booklet and DVD).Results:Between April 1, 2011, and October 31, 2012, 57 patients (mean age = 64), 42% of whom had lung and 23% gastrointestinal cancer, and 20 caregivers (mean age = 59), 80% of whom were spouses, completed the PtDA evaluation. Participants reported a high degree of satisfaction with the PtDA format, as well as with its length and clarity. They found the format of using patient interviews “validating.” The key themes were: (1) “the earlier the better” to view the PtDA; (2) feeling empowered, aware of different options, and an urgency to participate in advance care planning.Significance of results:The Looking Ahead PtDA was well received and helped patients with a serious illness realize the importance of prospective decision making in guiding their treatment pathways. We found that this PtDA can help seriously ill patients prior to the end of life to understand and discuss future healthcare decision making. However, systems to routinely provide PtDAs to seriously ill patients are yet not well developed.


2019 ◽  
Vol 12 ◽  
pp. 117822421982657 ◽  
Author(s):  
Karen Harrison Dening ◽  
Elizabeth L Sampson ◽  
Kay De Vries

The process of advance care planning in dementia is far from straightforward; as dementia progresses, the ability to consider future thoughts and actions becomes compromised, thus affecting decision-making abilities. Family carers find themselves increasingly in a position where they need to inform, or directly make, decisions on behalf of the person with dementia. This article discusses the context and importance of a palliative care approach and recommends rationales and strategies for healthcare professionals to support families affected by dementia to better plan for their future care.


2020 ◽  
Vol 37 (11) ◽  
pp. 985-987
Author(s):  
Benjamin Roberts ◽  
Scott M. Wright ◽  
Colleen Christmas ◽  
Mariah Robertson ◽  
David Shih Wu

Context: The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic laid bare the immediate need for primary palliative care education for many clinicians. Primary care clinicians in our health system reported an urgent need for support in advance care planning and end-of-life symptom management for their vulnerable patients. This article describes the design and dissemination of palliative care education for primary care clinicians using an established curriculum development method. Objectives: To develop a succinct and practical palliative care toolkit for use by primary care clinicians during the COVID-19 pandemic, focused on 2 key elements: (i) advance care planning communication skills based on the narrative 3-Act Model and (ii) comfort care symptom management at the end of life. Results: The toolkit was finalized through an iterative process involving a team of end-users and experts in palliative care and primary care, including social work, pharmacy, nursing, and medicine. The modules were formatted into an easily navigable, smartphone-friendly document to be used at point of care. The toolkit was disseminated to our institution’s primary care network with practices spanning our state. Early feedback has been positive. Conclusion: While we had been focused primarily on the inpatient setting, our palliative care team at Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center pivoted existing infrastructure and curriculum development expertise to meet the expressed needs of our primary care colleagues during the COVID-19 pandemic. Through collaboration with an interprofessional team including end-users, we designed and disseminated a concise palliative care toolkit within 6 weeks.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sydney M. Dy ◽  
Julie M. Waldfogel ◽  
Danetta H. Sloan ◽  
Valerie Cotter ◽  
Susan Hannum ◽  
...  

Objectives. To evaluate availability, effectiveness, and implementation of interventions for integrating palliative care into ambulatory care for U.S.-based adults with serious life-threatening chronic illness or conditions other than cancer and their caregivers We evaluated interventions addressing identification of patients, patient and caregiver education, shared decision-making tools, clinician education, and models of care. Data sources. We searched key U.S. national websites (March 2020) and PubMed®, CINAHL®, and the Cochrane Central Register of Controlled Trials (through May 2020). We also engaged Key Informants. Review methods. We completed a mixed-methods review; we sought, synthesized, and integrated Web resources; quantitative, qualitative and mixed-methods studies; and input from patient/caregiver and clinician/stakeholder Key Informants. Two reviewers screened websites and search results, abstracted data, assessed risk of bias or study quality, and graded strength of evidence (SOE) for key outcomes: health-related quality of life, patient overall symptom burden, patient depressive symptom scores, patient and caregiver satisfaction, and advance directive documentation. We performed meta-analyses when appropriate. Results. We included 46 Web resources, 20 quantitative effectiveness studies, and 16 qualitative implementation studies across primary care and specialty populations. Various prediction models, tools, and triggers to identify patients are available, but none were evaluated for effectiveness or implementation. Numerous patient and caregiver education tools are available, but none were evaluated for effectiveness or implementation. All of the shared decision-making tools addressed advance care planning; these tools may increase patient satisfaction and advance directive documentation compared with usual care (SOE: low). Patients and caregivers prefer advance care planning discussions grounded in patient and caregiver experiences with individualized timing. Although numerous education and training resources for nonpalliative care clinicians are available, we were unable to draw conclusions about implementation, and none have been evaluated for effectiveness. The models evaluated for integrating palliative care were not more effective than usual care for improving health-related quality of life or patient depressive symptom scores (SOE: moderate) and may have little to no effect on increasing patient satisfaction or decreasing overall symptom burden (SOE: low), but models for integrating palliative care were effective for increasing advance directive documentation (SOE: moderate). Multimodal interventions may have little to no effect on increasing advance directive documentation (SOE: low) and other graded outcomes were not assessed. For utilization, models for integrating palliative care were not found to be more effective than usual care for decreasing hospitalizations; we were unable to draw conclusions about most other aspects of utilization or cost and resource use. We were unable to draw conclusions about caregiver satisfaction or specific characteristics of models for integrating palliative care. Patient preferences for appropriate timing of palliative care varied; costs, additional visits, and travel were seen as barriers to implementation. Conclusions. For integrating palliative care into ambulatory care for serious illness and conditions other than cancer, advance care planning shared decision-making tools and palliative care models were the most widely evaluated interventions and may be effective for improving only a few outcomes. More research is needed, particularly on identification of patients for these interventions; education for patients, caregivers, and clinicians; shared decision-making tools beyond advance care planning and advance directive completion; and specific components, characteristics, and implementation factors in models for integrating palliative care into ambulatory care.


2017 ◽  
Vol 13 (9) ◽  
pp. e792-e799 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne M. Walling ◽  
Sarah F. D’Ambruoso ◽  
Jennifer L. Malin ◽  
Sara Hurvitz ◽  
Ann Zisser ◽  
...  

Purpose: To test a simultaneous care model for palliative care for patients with advanced cancer by embedding a palliative care nurse practitioner (NP) in an oncology clinic. Methods: We evaluated the effect of the intervention in two oncologists’ clinics beginning March 2014 by using implementation strategies, including use of a structured referral mechanism, routine symptom screening, integration of a psychology-based cancer supportive care center, implementation team meetings, team training, and a metrics dashboard for continuous quality improvement. After 1 year of implementation, we evaluated key process and outcome measures for supportive oncology and efficiency of the model by documenting tasks completed by the NP during a subset of patient visits and time-motion studies. Results: Of approximately 10,000 patients with active cancer treated in the health system, 2,829 patients had advanced cancer and were treated by 42 oncologists. Documentation of advance care planning increased for patients of the two intervention oncologists compared with patients of the other oncologists. Hospice referral before death was not different at baseline, but was significantly higher for patients of intervention oncologists compared with patients of control oncologists (53% v 23%; P = .02) over the intervention period. Efficiency evaluation revealed that approximately half the time spent by the embedded NP potentially could have been completed by other staff (eg, a nurse, a social worker, or administrative staff). Conclusion: An embedded palliative care NP model using scalable implementation strategies can improve advance care planning and hospice use among patients with advanced cancer.


PLoS Medicine ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 17 (11) ◽  
pp. e1003422
Author(s):  
Ida J. Korfage ◽  
Giulia Carreras ◽  
Caroline M. Arnfeldt Christensen ◽  
Pascalle Billekens ◽  
Louise Bramley ◽  
...  

Background Advance care planning (ACP) supports individuals to define, discuss, and record goals and preferences for future medical treatment and care. Despite being internationally recommended, randomised clinical trials of ACP in patients with advanced cancer are scarce. Methods and findings To test the implementation of ACP in patients with advanced cancer, we conducted a cluster-randomised trial in 23 hospitals across Belgium, Denmark, Italy, Netherlands, Slovenia, and United Kingdom in 2015–2018. Patients with advanced lung (stage III/IV) or colorectal (stage IV) cancer, WHO performance status 0–3, and at least 3 months life expectancy were eligible. The ACTION Respecting Choices ACP intervention as offered to patients in the intervention arm included scripted ACP conversations between patients, family members, and certified facilitators; standardised leaflets; and standardised advance directives. Control patients received care as usual. Main outcome measures were quality of life (operationalised as European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer [EORTC] emotional functioning) and symptoms. Secondary outcomes were coping, patient satisfaction, shared decision-making, patient involvement in decision-making, inclusion of advance directives (ADs) in hospital files, and use of hospital care. In all, 1,117 patients were included (442 intervention; 675 control), and 809 (72%) completed the 12-week questionnaire. Patients’ age ranged from 18 to 91 years, with a mean of 66; 39% were female. The mean number of ACP conversations per patient was 1.3. Fidelity was 86%. Sixteen percent of patients found ACP conversations distressing. Mean change in patients’ quality of life did not differ between intervention and control groups (T-score −1.8 versus −0.8, p = 0.59), nor did changes in symptoms, coping, patient satisfaction, and shared decision-making. Specialist palliative care (37% versus 27%, p = 0.002) and AD inclusion in hospital files (10% versus 3%, p < 0.001) were more likely in the intervention group. A key limitation of the study is that recruitment rates were lower in intervention than in control hospitals. Conclusions Our results show that quality of life effects were not different between patients who had ACP conversations and those who received usual care. The increased use of specialist palliative care and AD inclusion in hospital files of intervention patients is meaningful and requires further study. Our findings suggest that alternative approaches to support patient-centred end-of-life care in this population are needed. Trial registration ISRCTN registry ISRCTN63110516.


2013 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 282.2-283
Author(s):  
N Kubokawa ◽  
M Nishikawa ◽  
Y Yokoe ◽  
K Fukuda ◽  
H Hattori ◽  
...  

2017 ◽  
Vol 35 (15_suppl) ◽  
pp. 6525-6525
Author(s):  
Manali I. Patel ◽  
Vandana Sundaram ◽  
Manisha Desai ◽  
VJ Periyakoil ◽  
James Kahn ◽  
...  

6525 Background: Sustainable approaches to improve quality and safety of care of patients with advanced cancer while concurrently reducing costs is a growing national need. As part of the Veterans Administration Engagement of Patients with Advanced Cancer (EPAC) trial, we trained a lay health worker (LHW) to engage patients with stage 3 and 4 cancer in early advance care planning (ACP). The goal of this follow-up study was to examine the effect of the LHW intervention on patient-reported care experiences, healthcare utilization, and costs in the last 30 days of life for patients who died within 15 months of enrollment. Methods: We evaluated patient-reported experiences with decision-making, healthcare utilization, and total healthcare costs 30 days prior to death. A T-test was used to compare patient experiences with decision-making. To compare ED use and hospitalizations, we utilized an exact Poisson regression. A generalized linear model with gamma link-log function was used to compare total costs. The latter methods adjusted for length of follow-up. Results: In the 30 days prior to death, 60 patients died in each arm within 15 months of enrollment (difference not statistically significant). Patients in the intervention had significantly improved rates of ACP documentation (98% versus 18% p < 0.001), improved experiences with decision-making as measured by an index ranging from 0-5 with higher values representing more favorable experience (4.73 (SD 0.61) vs 4.15 (SD 1.02)) p < 0.001), higher utilization of hospice (77% vs 52%, p < 0.005), lower rates of any emergency department use (5% versus 45% p < 0.001) and any hospitalization (5% versus 43% p < 0.001), and significantly lower total costs of care ($1,048 versus $23,482 p < 0.001) compared to the patients randomized to the usual care arm. Conclusions: Integrating a LHW into oncology care to engage patients in early advance care planning resulted in significantly improved patient experience, decreased utilization and decreased total costs in the last month of life. LHWs may represent a sustainable resource to facilitate optimal patient-centered cancer care at the end-of-life. Clinical trial information: NCT02966509.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
A Bradshaw ◽  
L. Dunleavy ◽  
C. Walshe ◽  
N. Preston ◽  
R. Cripps ◽  
...  

AbstractBackgroundDuring the COVID-19 pandemic, specialist palliative care services have an important role to play conducting high-quality and individualised Advance Care Planning discussions. Little is known about the challenges to Advance Care Planning in this context, or the changes services have made in adapting to them.AimTo describe the challenges experienced, and changes made to support, Advance Care Planning at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic.DesignCross-sectional on-line survey of UK palliative and hospice services’ response to COVID-19. Closed-ended responses are reported descriptively. Open-ended responses were analysed using a thematic Framework approach.Respondents277 UK palliative and hospice care services.Results37.9% of services provided more Advance Care Planning directly. 58.5% provided more support to others. Some challenges to Advance Care Planning pre-dated the pandemic, whilst other were COVID-19 specific or exacerbated by COVID-19. Six themes demonstrated challenges at different levels of the Social Ecological Model, including: complex decision making in the face of a new disease; maintaining a personalised approach; COVID-specific communication difficulties; workload and pressure; sharing information; and national context of fear and uncertainty. Two themes demonstrate changes made to support Advance Care Planning, including: adapting local processes and adapting local structures.ConclusionsProfessionals and healthcare providers need to ensure Advance Care Planning is individualised by tailoring it to the values, priorities, and ethnic, cultural, and religious context of each person. Policymakers need to consider carefully how high-quality, person-centred Advance Care Planning can be resourced as a part of standard healthcare ahead of future pandemic waves.Key StatementsWhat is already known about the topic?–An important part of palliative care’s response to COVID-19 is ensuring that Advance Care Planning discussions occur with patients and their care networks–High quality Advance Care Planning is viewed as a process that adopts a holistic, collaborative, and individualised approach–Prior to COVID-19, challenges to Advance Care Planning included time constraints, lack of training, fears of taking away hope, limited resources, and insufficient knowledgeWhat this paper adds?–The COVID-19 pandemic exacerbated already-existing challenges to conducting high-quality, individualised Advance Care Planning, including the ability to maintain a personalised approach and sharing information between services–COVID-specific challenges to Advance Care Planning exist, including the complexities of decision-making for a novel disease, communication issues, and workload pressures–In responding to these challenges, services adapted local processes (prioritising specific components, normalisation and integration into everyday practice) and structures (using technology, shifting resources, collaboration) of careImplications for practice, theory or policy–COVID-19 has provided an opportunity to re-think Advance Care Planning in which the starting point to any discussion is always the values and priorities of patients themselves–Providers and policymakers need to urgently consider how high-quality Advance Care Planning can be resourced and normalised as a part of standard care across the health sector, ahead of future or recurrent pandemic waves and in routine care more generally–We provide questions for health professionals, services, and policy makers to consider in working towards this


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