2PreAssignmentPalliativeCare
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Transcript 2PreAssignmentPalliativeCare
Carla Hunt, RN, BSN
“To live in hearts we leave behind is not to die”
Thomas Campbell
Realities of Care
Rapidly aging U.S. population
Medical care has limitations and inappropriate use
of advanced technology to prolong life when death
is inevitable (Peaceful Death: Recommended Competencies and Curricular
Guidelines for End-of-Life Care, 1997).
Exorbitant expense is associated with futile care
2.5 million U.S. deaths have been negotiated
annually while life-extending/sustaining
measures were provided (Tilden & Thompson, 2009).
Palliative Care
Intends to improve the quality of life for patients and
families faced with life-limiting illness (World Health Organization,
2012).
Provides support in chronic illness: cardiac (CHF),
pulmonary (COPD), renal disease, cancer, immune
suppression, HIV/AIDS , dementia, traumatic injury
(McLean-Heitkemper, 2011).
Care or treatment that reduces or controls symptoms
instead of seeking cure or efforts to delay death.
Palliative Care
Begins after the patient receives the diagnosis
of life-limiting illness.
Goals:
Prevent and relieve patient suffering
Improve quality of life
Timeframe includes hospice, end-of-life, and
bereavement.
Generally precedes hospice.
Hospice philosophies are the foundation of
palliative care.
McLean-Heitkemper, 2011
Hospice
Holistic, compassionate care for the dying and their family
during terminal illness.
Hospice Medicare eligibility requires a prognosis of less
than six months life expectancy.
Provides supportive care for patients in the last phase of
incurable disease. Palliative focus instead of curative.
Preserves dignity and quality of life throughout the dying
process.
Focuses on symptom management, advanced care
planning, spiritual care, family support, and bereavement.
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Hospice
Addresses physical, emotional, social, and spiritual
needs of patients and families.
Collaborative and coordinated care via
interdisciplinary team members.
Care team includes: physicians, pharmacist, nurses,
nursing assistants, chaplain, volunteers, social worker,
and bereavement coordinator.
Services offered in the home, hospital, residential
care center, and nursing home.
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
End-of-Life
Generally refers to care in the final phase of illness
when the patient is near death or actively dying.
EOL care may be a few hours, weeks, or months .
The timeframe from diagnosis to death varies by
diagnosis and disease extensiveness.
Institute of Medicine considers EOL as the time of
coping with terminal illness or advanced age even
if death is not clearly imminent.
McLean-Heitkemper, 2011
Goals of EOL Care
Comfort and supportive care for the patient
and family during the dying process.
Improved quality of life for the life that
remains.
Dignified and peaceful death.
Emotional support for both patient and family.
McLean-Heitkemper, 2011
Consider for a moment…..
How would your life change if you learned
you would die in the next 12 months, six
months, or one month? (Sherman, Matzo, Panke, Grant, Rhome ,
2003)
What would you want to do if you were
diagnosed with a terminal condition?
How would you need to do to prepare?
Never loose sight of how very personal this
is for the patient and family!
When will death occur?
Prognosis is influenced by disease, desire to
live, and sometimes anticipation of special
events (Sherman, Matzo, Pitorak, Ferrlll, Malloy, 2005).
Not all patients experience the same
symptoms as there is no specific sequence
(McLean-Heitkemper , 2011).
Death results when all vital organ function
stops (cardiac, respiratory, and brain).
Brain Death
No brain or brainstem function.
Cerebral cortex no longer functions or is
irreversibly damaged.
Clinical brain death in the ICU—heart continues
to beat (intubation with mechanical ventilation).
Legal definition—brain function must cease for
brain death to be pronounced and life support
removed.
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Death Draws Near:
Physical Manifestations
Slowed metabolism and impaired organ function
that leads to multi-system failure and organ shut-
down.
Respirations are usually the first to stop.
Heart usually stops within a few minutes of
respirations.
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Death Draws Near:
Physical Manifestations cont.
Sensory:
Decreased sensation
Decreased ability to perceive pain and touch
Poor sense of taste and smell
Eyes: blurred vision, absent blink reflex,
sunken, glazed over, blank stare, slit eye lids
Loss of hearing (last sense to loose)
Inability to respond
McLean-Heitkemper, 2011
Death Draws Near:
Physical Manifestations cont.
Respiratory: (distress and air hunger common)
Rapid, slow, shallow, irregular breathing
Cheyne-Stokes respirations (alternating apnea
and deep, rapid respirations)
Slowed respirations “terminal gasps” or “guppy
breaths”
Unable to cough and clear secretions
Noisy, gurgling secretions audible without a
stethoscope, “death rattle”
McLean-Heitkemper, 2011
Death Draws Near:
Physical Manifestations
Cardiovascular:
Increased heart rate that begins to slow
Weak or absent pulses
Progressive decrease in blood pressure
Delayed absorption of injected medications
Irregular rhythm
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Death Draws Near:
Physical Manifestations cont.
Urinary:
Decreasing output
Incontinent
Inability to void
Gastrointestinal:
Decreased motility and peristalsis
Abdominal distention, nausea, and constipation
Loss of sphincter control makes incontinence common
as death occurs.
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Death Draws Near:
Physical Manifestations cont.
Musculoskeletal:
Severe weakness and inability to move
Relaxed facial tone—jaw drop, difficulty/inability
to speak and/or swallow
Poor body posturing and alignment
Impaired gag reflex
Myoclonus (involuntary jerking commonly seen
with high-dose opioids)
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Death Draws Near:
Physical Manifestations cont.
Integumentary:
Cold, clammy, diaphoretic, fever
Cyanosis of nose, nail beds, ears
Mottling of hands, feet, toes, arms, legs, and
knees
Skin may have wax-like appearance
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Death Draws Near:
Psychosocial Manifestations cont.
Conflicting decisions
Anxiety regarding things left undone
Feelings of meaningless life contributions
Fear of pain or shortness of breath
Loneliness
Helplessness
Depression
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Death Draws Near:
Psychosocial Manifestations cont.
Anticipatory grieving
Difficulty saying goodbye
Reminiscent of life’s events
Fear of loss of independence and functional
decline
Recognized condition deterioration that patient
correlates with approaching death
Restlessness
Inability to understand communication
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Confusion-Disorientation-Delirium
Management
Determine etiology—Disease progression, fever,
nearing death awareness, opioid effects, full
bladder , hypoxia, metabolic imbalances, toxin
accumulation due to liver or renal failure.
Management—Assess cause and treat, safety
precautions, administer sedatives, speak truthfully
regarding condition, provide spiritual and
emotional support, assess for caregiver fatigue.
McLean-Heitkemper 2011; Sherman et al., 2005
Dyspnea Management
Pharmacologic
Nonpharmacologic
Opioids (morphine)
Oxygen if hypoxic
Bronchodilators (albuterol)
Fan for air circulation, cool
Diuretics (furosemide)
room temperature
Positioning, elevate head
of bead
Suctioning
Benzodiazpines (lorazepam;
alprazolam)
Anxiolytics (buspirone)
Steriods (dexametasone, SoluMedrol)
Antibiotics
Sherman et al., 2004
Gastrointestinal Management
Nausea
Antiemetics
NG if obstructed
Constipation
Stimulant (Senna)
Bulk laxatives (Metamucil)
Warm fluids (prune juice)
Diarrhea
Opioids (Loperamide hydrochloride)
Bulk forming agents
Somatostatin (Sandostatin)
Sherman et al., 2004
Fatigue-Weakness Management
Increased weakness
Interventions include:
Assist with ADL’s
Bedrest—ROM, turning, positioning, and skin
assessment.
Alter medication routes—least invasive and
most effective
Aspiration precautions
Suction
McLean-Heitkemper 2011; Sherman et al., 2004; Sherman et al., 2005
Pain Management
Patients fear that they will die in pain
Scheduled analgesia for pain control (long/short
acting)
Inability to swallow—consider alternate
administration routes
Interventions—massage, reposition,
bracing/splinting
Alternative/ complimentary therapies
Use standardized tools for pain assessment
McLean-Heitkemper 2011; Sherman et al., 2004
Comfort Care:
Actively Dying
Simple patient directions
Oral care—sips of fluid, mouth care, lip
moisturizer
Preventive skin care—manage incontinence, skin
barriers.
Medications to alleviate respiratory congestion,
agitation, pain, and dyspnea.
Antiemetics for discomfort associated with
nausea and vomiting.
Sherman et al., 2005
Care of the Spirit
May or may not mean religion
Spiritual support provides strength and
decreases despair at EOL
Pray with patient and family
Involve pastoral services
Recognize spiritual diversity and ritualistic
EOL practices
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Emotional Support
Provide hope, comfort, and peacefulness (Matzo, Sherman, Sheehan,
Ferrell, & Penn, 2003).
Reassure the patient you will not abandon them
Ask yourself, “What would I do if this were my
family member?”
Provide realistic and honest information
Prepare for emotional decline and cognitive changes
Empathetic and compassionate care McLean-Heitkemper, 2011)
Encourage sharing of life stories, memories, and life
contributions
Live your life until you die (Cramer, 2010).
(
Communication
Communication is 7% verbal, 38% tone, and 55% body
language (Cramer, 2010)
Be present, use eye contact and touch, sit at the bedside,
listen more than you talk.
Communicate with open acceptance (McLean-Heitkemper, 2011)
Create an environment that feels safe to share feelings and
express emotion. Silence is ok.
Nearing death awareness:
Patient may see or talk with a loved ones that have
died
Patient may provide instructions for those left
behind
Response to Loss
Grief is normal, healthy process of reacting to loss and adapting
to change.
Bereavement is the time after death when grief and mourning
occur
Factors that influence grief:
Personal characteristics
Relationship with the deceased
Life stressors
Coping resources
Support systems
Often begins prior to death
Powerful, affects all aspects of one’s life
Nurse may be the recipient of anger. Do not react or take it personal.
McLean-Heitkemper 2011; Sherman et al., 2003
Grief/Bereavement:
Response to loss
Poor concentration, persistent sadness, constant
thoughts of the one who died
Guilt, anger, abnormal behavior
Weight loss, poor appetite
Difficulty sleeping, palpitations
Anxiety, fear, loneliness, hopelessness,
powerlessness
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Legal and Ethical Principles in
Complex EOL Care
Care determined by the patient’s wishes (McLean-Heitkemper ,2011)
Organ and tissue donations
Advance directives
Medical power of attorney or living wills
Resuscitation
The nurse must recognize how her/his personal beliefs,
values, and expectations influence EOL care (Matzo et al., 2003).
Fear of death, lack of experience , not knowing what to say,
unresolved grief, and disagreement with patient wishes
A nurse has an ethical responsibility to ensure everything
possible is done to provide a peaceful death.
Organ and Tissue Donation
Any part of the entire body may be
donated
Decision may be made prior to death but
family must consent at time of donation
Usually retrieved within a few hours after
death
Designated requestors at every hospital
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Legal Documents:
Protect the Patient’s Wishes
Advance directives
Written statements of medical care wishes
Sometimes called a living will
Directive to physicians
Patient’s desire to accept or deny treatment
Durable power of attorney for health care
Lists the person to make health care decisions should a
patient become unable to make informed decisions for
self
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Common Legal Documents
Do not resuscitate (DNR)
Orders instructing health care providers not to
perform CPR
Often requested by family
Must be signed by a physician to be valid
Purple bracelet placed on client
Push to change the term to allow natural death
(AND) to more clearly describe what occurs
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Ethical Issues
Beneficence—To do good without causing harm.
Give effective amounts of timely pain medication.
Failure to give effective pain medication and adequate dosing
neglects the principles of beneficence.
Nonmaleficence—To “do no harm”. To refrain from causing
harm.
Effective pain control that alleviates suffering in the
terminally ill.
Under treatment of pain may be more harmful than the
presumed harmful side effects.
Secondary effects that may hasten death are ethically
justified.
Bernhofer, 2011
Postmortem Care
After patient is pronounced dead the nurse prepares or
delegates preparation of the body
If death is in a semi-private room—move the other patient
out
Considerations when preparing body:
Cultural and ritualistic practices
Adherence to policies and procedures
Close the patient’s eyes
Replace dentures
Wash the body as needed
Remove tubes and dressings
Straighten the body
Leave a pillow in place to support the head
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Postmortem Care
Immediate family viewing and saying final
goodbye
Family should be allowed privacy and as much
time as needed with the deceased loved one
Body may stay on the unit 2 hours
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Special Needs of the Nurse
Recognize what can and cannot be
controlled
It is appropriate to cry with the patient and
family during the grieving process
Care for the dying is emotionally
challenging for everyone involved
It is common for nurse to feel helpless and
powerless
Feelings of sorrow, guilt, and frustration
need to be expressed
McLean-Heitkemper 2011
Nursing Management
Nursing Diagnoses: Psychosocial
Acute/ chronic confusion
Compromised family coping
Death anxiety
Disturbed thought processes
Spiritual distress
Ineffective denial
Interrupted family processes
Insomnia
Nursing Management
Nursing Diagnoses: Psychosocial
Fear
Grieving
Hopelessness
Impaired religiosity
Impaired social interaction
Impaired verbal communication
Ineffective coping
Readiness for enhanced spiritual
well-being
Risk for loneliness
Social isolation
Nursing Management
Nursing Diagnoses: Physical
Acute/ chronic pain
Bowel incontinence
Constipation
Decreased cardiac output
Diarrhea
Impaired tissue integrity
Impaired urinary elimination
Ineffective airway clearance
Impaired physical mobility
Nursing Management
Nursing Diagnoses: Physical
Fatigue
Imbalanced nutrition: less than body requirements
Impaired bed mobility
Impaired comfort
Impaired gas exchange
Impaired oral mucous membrane
Impaired skin integrity
Impaired swallowing
Nursing Management
Nursing Diagnoses: Physical
Ineffective breathing pattern
Ineffective thermoregulation
Ineffective tissue perfusion
Nausea
Risk for aspiration
Risk for infection
Risk for injury
Self-care deficit
Total urinary incontinence
Resources
American Cancer Society (http:/www.cancer.org)
National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization
(http://www.nhpco.org)
Hospice and Palliative Nurses Association
(http://www.hpna.org)
Oncology nursing Society (http://ons.org)
Journal of Supportive oncology: Quality of Life/Symptom
Management/Palliative care
(http://www.supportiveoncology.net)
End of Life Nursing Education Consortium From the
American Association of College of Nursing
(http://www.aacn.nche.edu/elnec/curriculum.htm)
References
Ackley, B.J. & Ladwig, G.B. (9th ed). Nursing diagnosis handbook: An evidencebased guide to planning care. Mosby.
American Association of Colleges of Nursing. (2004). Peaceful death:
Recommended competencies and curricular guidelines for end-of-life nursing
care. Retrieved from
http://www.aacn.nche.edu/Publications/deathfin.htm
Bernhofer, E. (2011). Ethics: Ethics and pain management in hospitalized patients.
The Online Journal of Issues in Nursing, 17(1). doi:
10.3912/OJN.Vol17No01EthCol01
Cramer, C. F. (2010). To live until you die: Quality of life at the end of life. Clinical
Journal of Oncology Nursing, 14(1), 53-56. doi: 10.1188/10.CJON.53-56
Matzo, M. L., Sherman, D. W., Lo, K., Egan, K. A., Grant, M., & Rhome, A. (2003).
Strategies for teaching loss, grief, and bereavement. Nurse Educator, 28(2), 7176. doi: 10.1097/00006223-200303000-00009
Matzo, M. L., Sherman, D. W., Nelson-Marten, P., Rhome, A., & Grant, M. (2004).
Ethical and legal issues in end-of-life care: content of the End-of-life Nursing
Education Consortium Curriculum and teaching strategies. Journal for Nurse
in Staff Development, 20(2), 59-66. doi: 10.1097/00124645-20040300-00001
References
McLean-Heitkemper, M. (2011). Palliative care at the end-of-life. In S. L. Lewis, S. RuffDirksen, M. McLean-Heitkemper, L. Bucher, & I. M. Camera (Eds.), Medicalsurgical nursing: Assessment and management of clinical problems (pp. 153-166). St.
Louis, MO: Mosby.
Sherman, D. W., Matzo, M. L., Coyne, P., Ferrell, B. R., & Penn, B. K. (2004). Teaching
symptom management in end-of-life care: The didactic content and teaching
strategies based on the End-of-Life Nursing Education Curriculum. Journal for
Nurses in Staff Development, 20(3), 103-115. doi: 10.1097/00124645-200405000-00001
Sherman, D. W., Matzo, M. L., Panke, J., Grant, M., & Rhome, A. (2003). End-of-Life
Nursing Education Consortium Curriculum: An introduction to palliative care.
Nurse Educator, 28(3), 111-120. doi: 10.1097/00006223-200305000-00004
Sherman, D. W., Matzo, M. L., Pitorak, E., Ferrell, B. R., & Malloy, P. (2005).
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teaching strategies. Journal for Nurses in Staff Development, 21(3), 93-100. doi:
10.1097/00124645-200505000-00003
Tilden, V. P., & Thompson, S. (2009). Policy issues in end-of-life care. Journal of Professional
Nursing, 25(6), 363-368. doi: 10.1016/j.profnurs.2009.08.005
World Health Organization. (2012). http://www.who.int/cancer/palliative/en/