Top Ten Tips Palliative Care Clinicians Should Know Before Their Patient Undergoes Surgery?
Rachel HadlerLara IndiaAngela M BaderOrly N FarberMelanie L FritzFabian M JohnstonNader N MassarwehRavi PathakSandra H SacksMargaret L SchwarzeJocelyn StreidWilliam E RosaRebecca A AslaksonPublished in: Journal of palliative medicine (2024)
Many seriously ill patients undergo surgical interventions. Palliative care clinicians may not be familiar with the nuances involved in perioperative care, however they can play a valuable role in enabling the delivery of patient-centered and goal-concordant perioperative care. The interval of time surrounding a surgical intervention is fraught with medical, psychosocial, and relational risks, many of which palliative care clinicians may be well-positioned to navigate. A perioperative palliative care consult may involve exploring gaps between clinician and patient expectations, facilitating continuity of symptom management or helping patients to designate a surrogate decision-maker before undergoing anesthesia. Palliative care clinicians may also be called upon to direct discussions around perioperative management of modified code status orders and to engage around the goal-concordance of proposed interventions. This article, written by a team of surgeons and anesthesiologists, many with subspecialty training in palliative medicine and/or ethics, offers ten tips to support palliative care clinicians and facilitate comprehensive discussion as they engage with patients and clinicians considering surgical interventions.
Keyphrases
- palliative care
- advanced cancer
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- chronic kidney disease
- healthcare
- prognostic factors
- patients undergoing
- peritoneal dialysis
- cardiac surgery
- physical activity
- minimally invasive
- public health
- case report
- acute kidney injury
- coronary artery disease
- acute coronary syndrome
- climate change
- deep learning
- artificial intelligence
- percutaneous coronary intervention
- affordable care act
- global health