Western Australian Centre for Rural Health, School of Population and Global Health, The University of Western Australia, Perth, WA 6009, Australia.
Eastern Health, Melbourne, VIC 3128, Australia.
Int J Environ Res Public Health. 2020 Apr 30;17(9):3131. doi: 10.3390/ijerph17093131.
Symptom relief is fundamental to palliative care. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (Indigenous) Australians are known to experience inequities in health care delivery and outcomes, but large-scale studies of end-of-life symptoms in this population are lacking. We compared symptom-related distress among Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australian patients in specialist palliative care using the multi-jurisdictional Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration dataset. Based on patient-reported rating scale responses, adjusted relative risks (aRRs) stratified by care setting were calculated for occurrence of (i) symptom-related moderate-to-severe distress and worsening distress during a first episode of care and (ii) symptom-related moderate-to-severe distress at the final pre-death assessment. The -value significance threshold was corrected for multiple comparisons. First-episode frequencies of symptom-related distress were similar among Indigenous ( = 1180) and non-Indigenous ( = 107,952) patients in both inpatient and community settings. In final pre-death assessments (681 Indigenous and 67,339 non-Indigenous patients), both groups had similar occurrence of moderate-to-severe distress when care was provided in hospital. In community settings, Indigenous compared with non-Indigenous patients had lower pre-death risks of moderate-to-severe distress from overall symptom occurrence (aRR 0.78; = 0.001; confidence interval [CI] 0.67-0.91). These findings provide reassurance of reasonable equivalence of end-of-life outcomes for Indigenous patients who have been accepted for specialist palliative care.
症状缓解是姑息治疗的基础。众所周知,土著和托雷斯海峡岛民(原住民)在医疗保健服务的提供和结果方面存在不平等现象,但针对该人群临终症状的大规模研究却很少。我们使用多司法管辖区姑息治疗结果合作数据集,比较了在专科姑息治疗中,原住民和非原住民澳大利亚患者的与症状相关的痛苦。根据患者报告的评分量表反应,针对(i)首次护理期间与症状相关的中度至重度痛苦和痛苦恶化,以及(ii)临终前最后一次评估时与症状相关的中度至重度痛苦,按护理环境分层计算了调整后的相对风险(aRR)。对多重比较进行了 -值显著性校正。在住院和社区环境中,与症状相关的痛苦在原住民(n = 1180)和非原住民(n = 107,952)患者的首次发作中均具有相似的频率。在临终前的最后一次评估中(681 名原住民和 67,339 名非原住民患者),当在医院提供护理时,两组患者都有类似的中度至重度痛苦发生。在社区环境中,与非原住民患者相比,原住民患者在总体症状发生时,临终前发生中度至重度痛苦的风险较低(aRR 0.78; = 0.001;置信区间 [CI] 0.67-0.91)。这些发现为接受专科姑息治疗的原住民患者的临终结局具有合理的等效性提供了保证。