Palliative and End of Life Care Group.
Primary Care Unit, Cambridge Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge School of Clinical Medicine, Cambridge Biomedical Campus, Forvie Site, Cambridge.
Br J Gen Pract. 2020 Oct 1;70(699):e757-e764. doi: 10.3399/bjgp20X712805. Print 2020 Oct.
Increasing numbers of people die of the frailty and multimorbidity associated with old age, often without receiving an end-of-life diagnosis. Compared to those with a single life-limiting condition such as cancer, frail older people are less likely to access adequate community care. To address this inequality, guidance for professional providers of community health care encourages them to make end-of-life diagnoses more often in such people. These diagnoses centre on prognosis, making them difficult to establish given the inherent unpredictability of age-related decline. This difficulty makes it important to ask how care provision is affected by not having an end-of-life diagnosis.
To explore the role of an end-of-life diagnosis in shaping the provision of health care outside acute hospitals.
Qualitative interviews with 19 healthcare providers from community-based settings, including nursing homes and out-of-hours services.
Semi-structured interviews (nine individual, three small group) were conducted. Data were analysed thematically and using constant comparison.
In the participants' accounts, it was unusual and problematic to consider frail older people as candidates for end-of-life diagnosis. Participants talked of this diagnosis as being useful to them as care providers, helping them prioritise caring for people diagnosed as 'end-of-life' and enabling them to offer additional services. This prioritisation and additional help was identified as excluding people who die without an end-of-life diagnosis.
End-of-life diagnosis is a first-class ticket to community care; people who die without such a diagnosis are potentially disadvantaged as regards care provision. Recognising this inequity should help policymakers and practitioners to mitigate it.
越来越多的人死于与衰老相关的虚弱和多种疾病,往往没有得到临终诊断。与患有单一生命限制疾病(如癌症)的人相比,体弱的老年人更不可能获得足够的社区护理。为了解决这种不平等,社区卫生保健专业提供者的指南鼓励他们更频繁地对这些人做出临终诊断。这些诊断集中在预后上,由于与年龄相关的衰退具有固有不可预测性,因此难以确定。这种困难使得询问在没有临终诊断的情况下护理提供如何受到影响变得很重要。
探讨临终诊断在塑造急性医院以外的医疗保健提供中的作用。
对来自社区环境(包括疗养院和非工作时间服务)的 19 名医疗保健提供者进行定性访谈。
进行半结构化访谈(9 个个人,3 个小组)。使用主题分析和常数比较进行数据分析。
在参与者的叙述中,考虑体弱的老年人作为临终诊断的候选人是不寻常和有问题的。参与者将这种诊断描述为对他们作为护理提供者有用,帮助他们优先考虑照顾被诊断为“临终”的人,并使他们能够提供额外的服务。这种优先考虑和额外的帮助被确定为排除没有临终诊断而死亡的人。
临终诊断是社区护理的头等舱票;没有这种诊断的人在护理提供方面可能处于不利地位。认识到这种不公平应该有助于政策制定者和从业者减轻这种不公平。