1. Transitioning to Palliative Care in an Italian Cardiac Intensive Care Unit Network.
- Author
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Sacco A, Pagnesi M, Frea S, Briani M, Dini CS, Bertaina M, Marini M, Trombara F, Villanova L, Ravera A, Tavazzi G, Pappalardo F, Morici N, and Potena L
- Subjects
- Humans, Palliative Care, Shock, Cardiogenic, Death, Intensive Care Units, Italy, Terminal Care methods, Defibrillators, Implantable, Heart Failure therapy
- Abstract
Background: Recent data indicate that end-of-life management for patients affected by acute decompensated heart failure in cardiac intensive care units is aggressive, with late or no engagement of palliative care teams., Objective: To assess current palliative care and end-of-life practices in a contemporary Italian multicenter registry of patients with cardiogenic shock due to acute decompensated heart failure., Methods: A survey-based approach was used to collect data on palliative care and end-of-life management practices. The AltShock-2 registry enrolled patients with cardiogenic shock from 12 participating centers. A subset of 153 patients with cardiogenic shock due to acute decompensated heart failure enrolled between March 2020 and March 2023 was analyzed, with a focus on early engagement of palliative care teams and deactivation of implantable cardioverter-defibrillators (ICDs)., Results: "Do not resuscitate" orders were documented in patient records in only 5 of 12 centers (42%). Palliative care teams were engaged for 21 of 153 enrolled patients (13.7%). Among the 51 patients with ICDs, 6 of 17 patients who died (35%) had defibrillator deactivation. Of the 17 patients who died, 13 died in the hospital and 4 died within 6 months after discharge; 1 patient had ICD deactivation supported by palliative care services at home., Conclusions: Therapy-limiting practices, including ICD deactivation, are not routine in the Italian centers participating in this study. The results emphasize the importance of integrating palliative care as a simultaneous process with intensive care to address the unmet needs of these patients and their families., (©2024 American Association of Critical-Care Nurses.)
- Published
- 2024
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