Palliative care models for patients living with advanced cancer: a narrative review for the emergency department clinician.
Corita R GrudzenPaige C BarkerJason J BischofAllison M CuthelEric D IsaacsLauren T SoutherlandRebecca L YamarikPublished in: Emergency Cancer Care (2022)
Eighty-one percent of persons living with cancer have an emergency department (ED) visit within the last 6 months of life. Many cancer patients in the ED are at an advanced stage with high symptom burden and complex needs, and over half is admitted to an inpatient setting. Innovative models of care have been developed to provide high quality, ambulatory, and home-based care to persons living with serious, life-limiting illness, such as advanced cancer. New care models can be divided into a number of categories based on either prognosis (e.g., greater than or less than 6 months), or level of care (e.g., lower versus higher intensity needs, such as intravenous pain/nausea medication or frequent monitoring), and goals of care (e.g., cancer-directed treatment versus symptom-focused care only). We performed a narrative review to (1) compare models of care for seriously ill cancer patients in the ED and (2) examine factors that may hasten or impede wider dissemination of these models.
Keyphrases
- palliative care
- advanced cancer
- emergency department
- healthcare
- pain management
- quality improvement
- squamous cell carcinoma
- blood pressure
- newly diagnosed
- affordable care act
- chronic pain
- mental health
- low dose
- high intensity
- ejection fraction
- end stage renal disease
- public health
- lymph node metastasis
- patient reported outcomes
- peritoneal dialysis