Palliative Care 2 Flashcards

1
Q

Functional decline is defined as

A

the loss oft the ability to care for oneself
the loss of activities of daily living is the cardinal feature of decline, especially if accompanied by unintentional weight loss, and it indicates the need for increased care assistance and suggests a short life expectancy

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2
Q

Elements of the Palliative Prognostic Score include

A

Ability to
1. Ambulate
2. Provide self-care
3. Maintain oral intake
4. and level of consciousness
A bed-bound patient completely dependent for all care with reduced oral intake and a diminished level of consciousness has a Palliative PRognostic Score of 10% and a 1-week median expected survival

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3
Q

If no one is available to speak for the patient, then…

A

the treating physician should act in the patient’s best interest.
This may include an order to “do not resuscitate” the patient if it is clear that aggressive therapy would not be beneficial

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4
Q

The emergency physician should be adept in communicating these to the patient/surrogate

A
  1. Determining patient decisionmaking capacity
  2. Quality of life
  3. Prognosis
  4. Talking with surrogate decision makers
  5. Discussing palliative care or hospice referral
  6. Breaking bad news - death pronouncement
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5
Q

Remarks on opioid dosing

A
  1. Opioid dosing is an essential skill in the practice of emergency medicine
  2. The safety of patient-controlled analgesic devices is predicated on the concept of progression of respiratory depression from sedation.
  3. IV opiates reach maximum therapeutic levels and have peak effects or side effects at 6 to 10 minutes.
  4. Therefore, IV pain mediacations can be safely redosed every 15 minutes until relief as long as level of consciousness is monitored
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6
Q

A commonly seen side effect of opiates

A

Constipation
Patients prescribed with opiates need a concurrent bowel regimen such as an osmotic agent (i.e., polyethylene glycol) or stimulant laxatives

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7
Q

Referrals to hospice care also can be made for patients with clearly expresssed prior wishes for comfort care should they sustain a catastrophic acute illness, such as:

A

intracranial bleed
infarcted bowel
devastating neurotrauma
renal failure in the presence of advanced heart failure, leading to multiorgan failure

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8
Q

Remarks on delirium therapy in imminent death

A

Delirium therapy can be directed to underlying cause (pain, fever), or
If known or reversible, treated with 0.5- to 5-mg doses ofIV haloperidol.
A total dose of 5 mg can produce a calming effect on a patient and, by extension, his or her family

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9
Q

Remarks on the goal of opiate therapy

A

The goal of opiate therapy is not intended to artifically hasten death but to ensure comfort.
There is firm ethical support for providing medicaiotn expresssly with a goal of comfort even if there is potential for unintentional double effect.

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10
Q

the 3 most common scenarios where hospice patients may be directed to the ED

A
  1. Acute symptom crisis
  2. A health concern unrelated to the hospice diagnosis
  3. Revoked and signed out of hospice
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11
Q

Burn patient that may benefit from palliative care

A

When age plus percent burn exceeds or nears 140

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