Morrison-Koechl Jill, Liu Sheng Han, Banerjee Albert, Heckman George, Keller Heather
Department of Kinesiology & Health Sciences, University of Waterloo, Waterloo, Ontario, Canada.
Department of Gerontology, St. Thomas University, Fredericton, New Brunswick, Canada.
J Multidiscip Healthc. 2023 Sep 20;16:2823-2837. doi: 10.2147/JMDH.S417344. eCollection 2023.
Signals of end-of-life decline observed in daily habits, such as mealtime participation, are important for moving towards comfort-focused goals of care in the final months of life of long-term care (LTC) residents. It is unclear how eating issues observed in real-time in LTC homes are used as indicators of suspected end of life. The study quantifies nutrition and key non-nutrition related signals (eg, general decline, unstable vitals) documented to describe end-of-life decline and the subsequent time to death.
A retrospective chart review identified the first documented conversation where end-of-life decline was considered by members of the care team (eg, nurses, physicians, dietitian, family member) for 76 randomly selected decedents from 9 LTC homes in southwestern Ontario, Canada. Time (days) to death was calculated. A directed content analysis of the free-text description of the suspected end-of-life decline was used to categorize signals. Cox proportional hazards regression analysis tested the risk of mortality associated with each categorized signal.
Time to death of residents (mean age = 88 ± 7 years; 60% female) from the first documentation of potential end-of-life decline ranged from 0 days to over 2 years prior to death (median = 27.5 days). Seven nutrition-related and 18 non-nutrition related signals were identified. Swallowing difficulty (HR = 2.99; 95% CI = 1.41, 6.33), cognitive decline (HR = 0.40; 95% CI = 0.20, 0.77), delirium (HR = 13.23; 95% CI = 1.57, 111.69), and cancer (HR = 0.18; 95% CI = 0.07, 0.48) were associated with time to death.
This study provides insight into the signals used by care providers in LTC to suspect that residents are declining towards the end of life and identifies four signals that were associated with time to death. When identified by care providers as indicators of end-of-life decline, swallowing difficulty and delirium predicted a shorter time to death, while cancer and cognitive decline predicted a longer time to death. Recognition of nutrition and non-nutrition related signals may be leveraged to systematically introduce timely comfort care conversations.
在日常习惯中观察到的临终衰退信号,如用餐参与情况,对于在长期护理(LTC)居民生命的最后几个月朝着以舒适为重点的护理目标迈进至关重要。目前尚不清楚在LTC机构中实时观察到的饮食问题是如何被用作疑似临终指标的。本研究对记录在案的营养及关键非营养相关信号(如全身衰退、生命体征不稳定)进行量化,以描述临终衰退情况及随后的死亡时间。
通过回顾性病历审查,确定了加拿大安大略省西南部9家LTC机构中76名随机选取的已故患者首次出现护理团队成员(如护士、医生、营养师、家庭成员)考虑临终衰退的记录对话。计算至死亡的时间(天数)。对疑似临终衰退的自由文本描述进行定向内容分析,以对信号进行分类。Cox比例风险回归分析测试了每个分类信号与死亡风险的相关性。
从首次记录潜在临终衰退到居民死亡的时间(平均年龄 = 88 ± 7岁;60%为女性),范围从死亡前0天到超过2年(中位数 = 27.5天)。识别出7个与营养相关和18个与非营养相关的信号。吞咽困难(HR = 2.99;95% CI = 1.41, 6.33)、认知衰退(HR = 0.40;95% CI = 0.20, 0.77)、谵妄(HR = 13.23;95% CI = 1.57, 111.69)和癌症(HR = 0.18;95% CI = 0.07, 0.48)与死亡时间相关。
本研究深入了解了LTC机构中护理人员用于怀疑居民临终衰退的信号,并确定了四个与死亡时间相关的信号。当护理人员将吞咽困难和谵妄识别为临终衰退指标时,预示着较短的死亡时间,而癌症和认知衰退则预示着较长的死亡时间。认识到营养和非营养相关信号,可有助于系统地引入及时的舒适护理对话。