Dying with Advanced Dementia in Long-Term Care Geriatric Institutions: A Retrospective Study
- 1 September 2008
- journal article
- Published by Mary Ann Liebert Inc in Journal of Palliative Medicine
- Vol. 11 (7) , 1023-1028
- https://doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2008.0020
Abstract
The aim of this study is to describe the last month of life of severely demented elders in long-term care institutions, and the clinical decisions in the management of their end-of-life events. Retrospective exploratory study. Seven Italian long-term care institutions with more than 200 beds. One hundred forty-one patients with advanced (FAST stage = 7c) dementia (Alzheimer disease, vascular, other kinds of dementia, severe cognitive impairment). Diagnosis, Mini-Mental State Examination, cause of death. Data were collected from clinical and nursing records referring to the last 30 days of life: symptoms and signs, intensity and incidence, treatments (antibiotics, analgesics, anxiolytics, antidepressants, artificial nutrition/hydration, and use of restraints); the last 48 hours: cardiopulmonary resuscitation attempts and life-sustaining drugs. Patients were given antibiotics (71.6%), anxiolytics (37.1%), and antidepressants (7.8%). Twenty-nine patients (20.5%) were tube- or percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy (PEG)-fed. Most patients (66.6%) were also parenterally hydrated (72 intravenously, 15 by hypodermoclysis). Some form of physical restraint was used for 58.2% (bed-rails and other immobilizers). Almost half of the patients had pressure sores. In general, attention to physical suffering was fairly good, but during the last 48 hours a number of interventions could be considered inappropriate for these patients: tube feeding (20.5%), intravenous hydration (66.6%), antibiotics (71.6%), and life-sustaining drugs (34.0%). Some indicators imply a less than optimal quality of care (restraints, pressure sores, psychoactive drugs, and the lack of documentation of shared decision-making) and suggest that far advanced demented patients are not fully perceived as "terminal."Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Specialist palliative care in dementiaBMJ, 2005
- Using rapid-cycle quality improvement methodology to reduce feeding tubes in patients with advanced dementia: before and after studyBMJ, 2004
- Survival of persons with Alzheimer's disease: caregiver coping matters.The Gerontologist, 2004
- Treatment of Nursing Home Residents with Dementia and Lower Respiratory Tract Infection in the United States and the Netherlands: An Ocean ApartJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2004
- Dying With Advanced Dementia in the Nursing HomeArchives of internal medicine (1960), 2004
- The Use of Life‐Sustaining Treatments in Hospitalized Persons Aged 80 and OlderJournal of the American Geriatrics Society, 2002
- End-of-Life Care in Dementia: A Review of Problems, Prospects, and Solutions in PracticeJournal of the American Medical Directors Association, 2002
- A Reevaluation of the Duration of Survival after the Onset of DementiaNew England Journal of Medicine, 2001
- Survival in End-Stage Dementia Following Acute IllnessJAMA, 2000
- Prevalence of chronic diseases in older Italians: comparing self- reported and clinical diagnoses. The Italian Longitudinal Study on Aging Working GroupInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1997