Prehospital emergency treatment of palliative care patients with cardiac arrest: a retrolective investigation
- PMID: 19813029
- PMCID: PMC2923330
- DOI: 10.1007/s00520-009-0746-8
Prehospital emergency treatment of palliative care patients with cardiac arrest: a retrolective investigation
Abstract
Background: Today, prehospital emergency medical teams (EMTs) are confronted with emergent situations of cardiac arrest in palliative care patients. However, little is known about the out-of-hospital approach in this situation and the long-term survival rate of this specific patient type. The aim of the present investigation was to provide information about the strategic and therapeutic approach employed by EMTs in outpatient palliative care patients in cardiac arrest.
Methods: During a period of 2 years, we retrolectively analysed emergency medical calls with regard to palliative care emergency situations dealing with cardiac arrest. We evaluated the numbers of patients who were resuscitated, the prevalence of an advance directive or other end-of-life protocol, the first responder on cardiac arrest, the return of spontaneous circulation (ROSC) and the survival rate.
Results: Eighty-eight palliative care patients in cardiac arrest were analysed. In 19 patients (22%), no resuscitation was started. Paramedics and prehospital emergency physicians began resuscitation in 61 cases (69%) and in 8 cases (9%), respectively. A total of 10 patients (11%) showed a ROSC; none survived after 48 h. Advance directives were available in 43% of cases. The start of resuscitation was independent of the presence of an advance directive or other end-of-life protocol.
Conclusions: Strategic and therapeutic approaches in outpatient palliative care patients with cardiac arrest differ depending on medical qualification. Although many of these patients do not wish to be resuscitated, resuscitation was started independent of the presence of advance directive. To reduce legal insecurity and to avoid resuscitation and a possible lengthening of the dying process, advance directives and/or "Do not attempt resuscitation" orders should be more readily available and should be adhered to more closely.
Conflict of interest statement
The corresponding author and co-authors confirm that they have no connections to any of the companies whose products are mentioned in the article, or with any company that sells competing products. The authors mention that the present investigation includes data of patients (database), which was published previously in other journal (Supportive Care Cancer, concerning the expertise of the prehospital emergency physicians who treated all palliative care emergencies; J Opioid Management, concerning the treatment of the symptom “dyspnoea” in palliative care patients). These articles were cited in the present investigation.
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