Palliative care for newborns: practices in a level-III unit during a 5-year period

The "Patients' rights and end-of-life care" act known as "Leonetti's Law" promulgated in 2005 has promoted the use of palliative care to avoid unreasonable obstinacy when life-sustaining treatment appears disproportionate. Very little is known about this new practice fo...

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Veröffentlicht in:ARCHIVES DE PEDIATRIE 2014-02, Vol.21 (2), p.177-183
Hauptverfasser: Mazille, N, Litzler-Renault, S, Weider, I, Donato, L, Astruc, D, Kuhn, P
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Sprache:fre
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Zusammenfassung:The "Patients' rights and end-of-life care" act known as "Leonetti's Law" promulgated in 2005 has promoted the use of palliative care to avoid unreasonable obstinacy when life-sustaining treatment appears disproportionate. Very little is known about this new practice for newborns in French neonatal units. To describe and evaluate the practice of palliative care in the newborn (mode of entry, characteristics, and modalities) and its evolution over time. Ambispective observational study conducted in a level III neonatal center. We included all newborns presenting conditions for which palliative care was introduced. Quantitative and qualitative analyses of routinely collected data, recorded from medical and nursing charts. We compared the recorded data between periods P1 (2006-2007) and P2 (2008-2010) using the Chi(2) test to assess changes over time. A total of 93 newborns benefited from palliative care during the study period. The main medical conditions motivating palliative care initiation in the newborns were severe complications of prematurity (36/93, 39%), anoxic-ischemic encephalopathy (19/93, 20.5%), severe malformations (8/93, 8.5%), severe congenital heart disease (8/93, 8.5%), and other various etiologies (22/93, 23.5%). Both the number of newborns in palliative care/total number of births and the number of deaths after palliative care/total number of neonatal deaths remained stable. In case of prenatal diagnosis (n=31), there was an increase in the number of "palliative care from birth projects" (13/22 in P2 vs. 1/9 in P1, P=0.02). Collective meetings during the decision process were significantly more frequently reported in the infants' charts in P2 (48/59 in P2 vs. 18/34 in P1, P
ISSN:1769-664X
DOI:10.1016/j.arcped.2013.10.024