Digitally Recording Comfort Observations in the Last Days of Life

Background: 37.5% of deaths in our area occur in hospital. There are known high unmet needs of adult patients dying in hospital, this unmet need can be reduced by using an individualised care plan and specialist palliative care review. Intervention: In 2022 UHSussex developed an electronic comfort o...

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Veröffentlicht in:American journal of hospice & palliative medicine 2025-02, Vol.42 (2), p.163-167
Hauptverfasser: Stewart, Eleanor, Ford-Dunn, Suzanne, Bass, Steve, Ede, Charlotte, Elliott, Julie, Peters, Debbie, Caputo, Rita, Moreira, Luis, Savage, Emily, Minton, Ollie
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container_end_page 167
container_issue 2
container_start_page 163
container_title American journal of hospice & palliative medicine
container_volume 42
creator Stewart, Eleanor
Ford-Dunn, Suzanne
Bass, Steve
Ede, Charlotte
Elliott, Julie
Peters, Debbie
Caputo, Rita
Moreira, Luis
Savage, Emily
Minton, Ollie
description Background: 37.5% of deaths in our area occur in hospital. There are known high unmet needs of adult patients dying in hospital, this unmet need can be reduced by using an individualised care plan and specialist palliative care review. Intervention: In 2022 UHSussex developed an electronic comfort observation chart and individualised care plan, with a centralised dashboard allowing Palliative Care Teams (SPCT) to view trends, target interventions, and a rolling prospective audit. Results: 3000 patients have had their care supported with electronic comfort observations (e-comfort obs). Over 72% of all deaths in the Trust in the last 3 months have been on e-comfort obs, with 2/3 of all deaths in the first 12 months on e-comfort obs. The average length of time on e-comfort obs is 4 days resulting in 70,000 sets of e-comfort obs recorded since launch. Seven percent of e-comfort obs record moderate or severe symptoms. We have identified benefits to people who are dying, those important to them, ward staff, SPCT and on a systems level. Conclusion: E-comfort obs can be successfully embedded in a large acute Trust. This development should improve quality of end of life care in our hospitals both for individuals and for future patients, through on-going targeted education and intervention. Further work is needed to develop the system further including integrating data from electronic prescribing.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/10499091241234859
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There are known high unmet needs of adult patients dying in hospital, this unmet need can be reduced by using an individualised care plan and specialist palliative care review. Intervention: In 2022 UHSussex developed an electronic comfort observation chart and individualised care plan, with a centralised dashboard allowing Palliative Care Teams (SPCT) to view trends, target interventions, and a rolling prospective audit. Results: 3000 patients have had their care supported with electronic comfort observations (e-comfort obs). Over 72% of all deaths in the Trust in the last 3 months have been on e-comfort obs, with 2/3 of all deaths in the first 12 months on e-comfort obs. The average length of time on e-comfort obs is 4 days resulting in 70,000 sets of e-comfort obs recorded since launch. Seven percent of e-comfort obs record moderate or severe symptoms. We have identified benefits to people who are dying, those important to them, ward staff, SPCT and on a systems level. Conclusion: E-comfort obs can be successfully embedded in a large acute Trust. This development should improve quality of end of life care in our hospitals both for individuals and for future patients, through on-going targeted education and intervention. 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subjects Adult
Electronic Health Records
Female
Humans
Male
Palliative Care - organization & administration
Patient Care Team - organization & administration
Patient Comfort
Terminal Care - organization & administration
title Digitally Recording Comfort Observations in the Last Days of Life
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