A comparison of the use of sedatives in a hospital support team and in a hospice
- PMID: 9156110
- DOI: 10.1177/026921639701100208
A comparison of the use of sedatives in a hospital support team and in a hospice
Abstract
This study examines how frequently and for what indications sedatives are prescribed in a hospital support team and in a hospice. We also looked at the survival of sedated patients from the date of admission and from the start of sedation. Overall 26% of patients were prescribed sedatives in order to sedate them (31% at the hospice and 21% at the hospital) and 43% of patients were given sedatives for symptom control (67% at the hospice and 21% at the hospital). Sedated patients survived for a mean of 1.3 days after the start of sedation, and there was no detectable difference in survival from the date of admission between sedated and nonsedated patients.
Comment in
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Use of sedatives in palliative medicine.Palliat Med. 1997 Nov;11(6):493-4. doi: 10.1177/026921639701100612. Palliat Med. 1997. PMID: 9519175 No abstract available.
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