Clinical considerations about terminally ill cancer patients who died in hospice unit.
- Author:
Do Ho MOON
1
;
Wha Sook CHOE
;
Myung Ah LEE
;
In Sook WOO
;
Jin Hyoung KANG
;
Young Seon HONG
;
Kyung Shick LEE
Author Information
1. Department of Internal Medicine, Sam Anyang Hospital, Anyang, Gyeonggi-do, Korea. mdmoon4@hanmail.net
- Publication Type:Original Article
- Keywords:
Terminally ill cancer patients;
Hospice palliative care;
Physician specialty;
Survival
- MeSH:
Analgesics;
Education;
Female;
Gyeonggi-do;
Hospices*;
Hospitalization;
Humans;
Internal Medicine;
Male;
Medical Records;
Palliative Care;
Stomach Neoplasms;
Terminally Ill*
- From:Korean Journal of Medicine
2004;67(4):341-348
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
-
Abstract:
BACKGROUND: Although physicians state that patients ideally should receive hospice palliative care for 3 months before death, the majority of patients survive less than one month in hospice palliative care. This is too short to do effective hospice palliative care. Therefore, we figured out the problems through the clinical considerations about terminally ill cancer patients who had died in hospice unit. METHODS: From July to December in 2003, 107 patients with terminally ill cancer who had died in Sam Anyang Hospice Unit were enrolled in this study. For getting the informations about patients characteristics, we reviewed the medical records and interviewed the patients on the first visit. RESULTS: There were 70 males (65%) and 37 females (35%), and median age of patients was 60 years (range 23-93). The most common cancer was stomach cancer (18 patients, 17%). Forty seven patients (44%) took analgesics, the others 60 (56%) not. The most common symptom was pain (75 patients, 70%) and the most prevalent reason for admission was also pain (60, 56%). The most prevalent physician specialty who transferred patients or referred to local hospital was other internal medicine (48 patients, 44%), followed by hemato-oncology (38, 36%), surgery (12, 11%) and others (9, 9%). The median duration between the day when the patients were diagnosed as terminally ill cancer patient and the day when they were referred to hospice center is 48 days. The median survival in hospice palliative care is 30 days. The median hospitalization is 19 days. CONCLUSION: We found that lack of recognition about hospice palliative care of physicians, patients and families made the length of hospice palliative care too short. To do effective hospice palliative care, it needs education and promotion for them constantly.