A comparative study of the palliative care needs of heart failure and cancer patients.
Affiliation
Department of Palliative Medicine, St Vincent's University Hospital, Dublin,, Ireland. normaoleary@hotmail.comIssue Date
2012-02-01T10:32:20ZMeSH
AdultAged
Aged, 80 and over
Cross-Sectional Studies
Female
Follow-Up Studies
*Health Services Needs and Demand
Heart Failure/complications/physiopathology/*therapy
Humans
Male
Middle Aged
Neoplasms/complications/psychology/*therapy
Palliative Care/*utilization
*Patient Satisfaction
*Quality of Life
Retrospective Studies
Stroke Volume/physiology
Treatment Outcome
Metadata
Show full item recordCitation
Eur J Heart Fail. 2009 Apr;11(4):406-12. Epub 2009 Feb 5.Journal
European journal of heart failureDOI
10.1093/eurjhf/hfp007PubMed ID
19196753Abstract
AIMS: Studies suggest that patients with advanced heart failure (HF) have unmet palliative care (PC) needs. However, many of these studies have been retrospective or based on patients receiving poorly coordinated ad hoc care. We aimed to demonstrate whether the PC needs of patients with advanced HF receiving specialist multidisciplinary coordinated care are similar to cancer patients deemed to have specialist PC needs; thereby justifying the extension of specialist PC services to HF patients. METHODS AND RESULTS: This was a cross-sectional comparative cohort study of 50 HF patients and 50 cancer patients, using quantitative and qualitative methods. Both patient cohorts were statistically indistinguishable in terms of symptom burden, emotional wellbeing, and quality-of-life scores. HF patients had good access to community and social support. HF patients particularly valued the close supervision, medication monitoring, ease of access to service, telephone support, and key worker provided at the HF unit. A small subset of patients had unmet PC needs. A palliative transition point is described. CONCLUSION: HF patients should not be excluded from specialist PC services. However, the majority of their needs can be met at a HF unit. Recognition of the palliative transition point may be key to ensuring that end-of-life issues are addressed. The palliative transition point needs further evaluation.Language
engISSN
1388-9842 (Print)1388-9842 (Linking)
ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1093/eurjhf/hfp007