Effects of hospice-shared care on terminal cancer patients in Taiwan: A hospital-based observational study

To assess how hospice-shared care (HSC) affected the likelihood of aggressive medical treatments and the life quality among terminal cancer patients. In the first part, a cohort of 160 late-stage cancer patients who died in non-hospice wards were identified to review their charts in their last 22 da...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of oncology nursing : the official journal of European Oncology Nursing Society 2024-04, Vol.69, p.102525-102525, Article 102525
Hauptverfasser: Huang, Hui-Wen, Liu, Chun-Yu, Tung, Tao-Hsin, Liu, Li-Ni
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:To assess how hospice-shared care (HSC) affected the likelihood of aggressive medical treatments and the life quality among terminal cancer patients. In the first part, a cohort of 160 late-stage cancer patients who died in non-hospice wards were identified to review their charts in their last 22 days before death. In the second part, a total of 19 late-stage cancer patients with clear consciousness admitted to non-hospice wards were identified to investigate their quality of life for the final 2 weeks before death. The utilization rate of HSC was 55.6%. Among these, the rate for late referral to HSC (≤7 days before death) was 43.8% and early referral (>3 months before death) was 5.6%. Compared to the non-HSC group, in the last few weeks of life, the HSC group underwent lower incidence of chemotherapy use (10.1% vs. 39.4%, p 
ISSN:1462-3889
1532-2122
DOI:10.1016/j.ejon.2024.102525