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      Palliative Care and Prehospital Emergency Medicine : Analysis of a Case Series

      case-report
      , MD, , MD, MBA, , MD, , Prof, , MD, MPH
      Medicine
      Wolters Kluwer Health

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          Abstract

          Palliative care, which is intended to keep patients at home as long as possible, is increasingly proposed for patients who live at home, with their family, or in retirement homes. Although their condition is expected to have a lethal evolution, the patients—or more often their families or entourages—are sometimes confronted with sudden situations of respiratory distress, convulsions, hemorrhage, coma, anxiety, or pain. Prehospital emergency services are therefore often confronted with palliative care situations, situations in which medical teams are not skilled and therefore frequently feel awkward.

          We conducted a retrospective study about cases of palliative care situations that were managed by prehospital emergency physicians (EPs) over a period of 8 months in 2012, in the urban region of Lausanne in the State of Vaud, Switzerland.

          The prehospital EPs managed 1586 prehospital emergencies during the study period. We report 4 situations of respiratory distress or neurological disorders in advanced cancer patients, highlighting end-of-life and palliative care situations that may be encountered by prehospital emergency services.

          The similarity of the cases, the reasons leading to the involvement of prehospital EPs, and the ethical dilemma illustrated by these situations are discussed. These situations highlight the need for more formal education in palliative care for EPs and prehospital emergency teams, and the need to fully communicate the planning and implementation of palliative care with patients and patients’ family members.

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          Most cited references9

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          Emergency medical services use by the elderly: analysis of a statewide database.

          Elderly patients use emergency medical services (EMS) at a high rate. Objectives. To test the hypothesis that EMS use for emergency department (ED) transports increases across the life span and to estimate changes in the EMS volume in North Carolina (NC) during the next 20 years due to the aging of the population. We conducted a retrospective observational study of EMS transports to EDs in the state of NC in 2007. Data were obtained from the North Carolina Disease Event Tracking and Epidemiologic Collection Tool (NC DETECT), which records data for all visits to 105 of the 112 EDs in the state. The association between EMS use and age was assessed using the chi-square test for trend. State demographic projections (U.S. Census Bureau) were used to estimate the increase in EMS use over the next 20 years due to population aging. There were 3,853,866 NC ED visits recorded in 2007. Complete arrival and disposition data were available for 2,743,221 visits (71.2%). Patient visits with and without complete data were similar in mean age (37.4 vs. 37.8 years), percentage female (55.4% vs. 56.1%), and use of EMS (16.9% vs. 16.8%). Visits with complete data were used in the analyses. The proportion of ED visits in which the patient was brought by EMS increased steadily across the life span (p < 0.001). Visits by individuals 65 years of age or older accounted for 14.7% of all visits and 38.3% of all EMS transports to the ED. For those patients aged 85 years and older, EMS was the most common mode of ED arrival (60.6%). We estimate that by 2030, total EMS transports to NC EDs will increase by 47%. Patients 65 years of age and older are projected to account for 70% of this increase and to compose 49% of all EMS transports by 2030. The proportion of patients using EMS to reach NC EDs increases steadily with age. By 2030, older patients will account for approximately half of EMS transports to NC EDs. The changes likely exemplify national trends and highlight the growth of EMS service needs for the elderly and the importance of emphasizing geriatric care in EMS training.
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            End-of-life care issues: a personal, economic, public policy, and public health crisis.

            Advance directive documents are free, legal, and readily available, yet too few Americans have completed one. Initiating discussions about death is challenging, but progress in medical technology, which leads to increasingly complex medical care choices, makes this imperative. Advance directives help manage decision-making during medical crises and end-of-life care. They allow personalized care according to individual values and a likely reduction in end-of-life health care costs. We argue that advance directives should be part of the public health policy agenda and health reform.
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              Why do cancer patients die in the emergency department?: an analysis of 283 deaths in NC EDs.

              Emergency department (ED) visits are made by cancer patients for symptom management, treatment effects, oncologic emergencies, or end of life care. While most patients prefer to die at home, many die in health care institutions. The purpose of this study is to describe visit characteristics of cancer patients who died in the ED and their most common chief complaints using 2008 ED visit data from the North Carolina Disease Event Tracking and Epidemiologic Collection Tool (NC DETECT). Of the 37,760 cancer-related ED visits, 283 resulted in death. For lung cancer patients, 104 died in the ED with 70.9% dying on their first ED visit. Research on factors precipitating ED visits by cancer patients is needed to address end of life care needs.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Medicine (Baltimore)
                Medicine (Baltimore)
                MEDI
                Medicine
                Wolters Kluwer Health
                0025-7974
                1536-5964
                November 2014
                28 November 2014
                : 93
                : 25
                : e128
                Affiliations
                From the Emergency Service (P-NC, FDa, OH); Palliative Care Unit, Lausanne University Hospital, Lausanne (FDi); and Institute of Biomedical Ethics, University of Geneva, Geneva, Switzerland (SH).
                Author notes
                Correspondence: Dr Pierre-Nicolas Carron, Emergency Department, Lausanne University Hospital, CH-1011 Lausanne, Switzerland (e-mail: pierre-nicolas.carron@ 123456chuv.ch).
                Article
                00128
                10.1097/MD.0000000000000128
                4616376
                25437023
                ee2009ba-94fd-4cc3-a053-3c4584eb78e9
                © 2014 Wolters Kluwer Health | Lippincott Williams & Wilkins

                This is an open access article distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial License, where it is permissible to download, share and reproduce the work in any medium, provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be used commercially. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0

                History
                : 7 July 2014
                : 26 August 2014
                : 26 August 2014
                Categories
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                Article
                Clinical Case Report
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