Center for the Study of Healthcare Provider Behavior, Veterans Administration Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System; Veterans Administration Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System; Cedars-Sinai Medical Center; University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) School of Public Health; Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, Los Angeles, CA.
J Oncol Pract. 2011 Nov;7(6):361-6. doi: 10.1200/JOP.2011.000364.
We sought to describe the documentation, frequency, and timing of discussions about patient preferences for care and to examine patterns of palliative care and hospice use among patients with advanced cancer.
We prospectively abstracted the medical records of 118 patients receiving care at a Veterans Administration (VA) facility from diagnosis of stage IV disease to 12 months postdiagnosis or death. We used univariate statistics to describe the type and frequency of documentation of patient preferences and palliative care/hospice referral. We calculated the time from diagnosis to the first documentation of preferences and the time from first documentation to death. We compared documentation of patient preferences between decedents and nondecedents using χ(2) tests.
The majority of patients (81%) had some documentation of their care preferences recorded, although decedents were significantly more likely to have had their preferences documented than nondecedents (96% v 60%; P < .000). Most (53%) patients did not have a formal advance directive documented in the medical record. The mean time from diagnosis to the first documentation of preferences was approximately 2 months. More than half of all patients (53%) and almost three-quarters of decedents (73%) had a palliative care consultation.
Despite high rates of preference documentation, there remains room for improvement. Providers may need to be helped to identify patients earlier in their trajectory for appropriate palliative care services, and future work should focus on developing useful alternatives to advance directives for adequately documenting patient preferences.
我们旨在描述有关患者对治疗偏好的讨论的记录、频率和时间,并研究晚期癌症患者接受姑息治疗和临终关怀服务的模式。
我们前瞻性地从诊断为 IV 期疾病到诊断后 12 个月或死亡时,对退伍军人事务部(VA)机构接受治疗的 118 例患者的病历进行了摘录。我们使用单变量统计来描述患者偏好和姑息治疗/临终关怀转诊的记录类型和频率。我们计算了从诊断到首次记录偏好的时间,以及从首次记录到死亡的时间。我们使用 χ(2)检验比较了死亡患者和未死亡患者记录的患者偏好。
大多数患者(81%)有记录其护理偏好的记录,尽管死亡患者比未死亡患者更有可能记录其偏好(96%比 60%;P <.000)。大多数(53%)患者的医疗记录中没有记录正式的预先指示。从诊断到首次记录偏好的平均时间约为 2 个月。超过一半的患者(53%)和近四分之三的死亡患者(73%)接受了姑息治疗咨询。
尽管偏好记录的比例很高,但仍有改进的空间。可能需要帮助提供者更早地识别出适合姑息治疗服务的患者,未来的工作应集中于开发有用的替代预先指示的方法,以充分记录患者的偏好。