Timing and content of serious illness conversations for patients with advanced heart failure in a specialty-aligned palliative care service.
Heart Lung
; 69: 1-10, 2024 Sep 11.
Article
en En
| MEDLINE
| ID: mdl-39265432
ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND:
Patients with advanced heart failure (AHF) desire communication around values and goals prior to treatment decisions.OBJECTIVES:
To evaluate the timing and content of the first serious illness communication (SI conversation) for patients with AHF after referral to a specialist palliative care (PC) team (HeartPal).METHODS:
In this retrospective cohort study, we used electronic health records to identify patients referred to HeartPal and their first SI conversations at a tertiary care hospital between October 2018 and September 2021. We used natural language processing and predetermined codes to quantify prevalence of prior goals of care conversations by the cardiology team within six months preceding the HeartPal consultation and the prevalence of hopes, fears, and seven conversation content codes. Consecutive SI conversations and patient outcomes were followed until March 2022.RESULTS:
Of 468 patients (mean age 64 years, 72 % male, 66 % referred for goals of care conversation), 25.2 % had prior documented goals of care conversations preceding the HeartPal consultation. During the study period, 206 (44.0 %) patients died (median time from initial SI conversation to death 65 days, IQR 206) and 43.2 % engaged in multiple SI conversations before death. SI conversation analysis (n = 324) revealed that patients hoped to "be at home" (74.1 %, n = 240), "be independent" (65.7 %, n = 213) and "live as long as possible" (53.4 %, n = 173). Conversation content included goals of care (83.0 %), strengths (83.0 %), decision-making (79.3 %), spirituality (71.0 %), coping (52.2 %), and prognostic communication (43.5 %).CONCLUSION:
Specialist PC service provides documentation of goals and values and offers longitudinal follow-up for patients with AHF.
Texto completo:
1
Colección:
01-internacional
Base de datos:
MEDLINE
Idioma:
En
Revista:
Heart Lung
Año:
2024
Tipo del documento:
Article
Pais de publicación:
Estados Unidos