Abstract
Background: A large gap exists between the practice of emergency medicine and palliative care. Although hospice and palliative medicine has recently been recognized as a subspecialty of emergency medicine, few palliative care teams routinely interact with emergency providers, and primary palliative care skills among emergency providers are lacking. Objective: To identify the proportion and characteristics of patients who receive a palliative care consultation and arrive via the emergency department (ED). Methods: A descriptive study of adult ED patients from an urban, academic tertiary care hospital who received a palliative care consultation in January 2005 or January 2009. Results: In January 2005, 100 of the 161 consults (62%) arrived via the ED versus 63 of 124 consults (51%) in January 2009 (p=0.06). Mean days from admission to consultation in January 2005 were six days (standard deviation 11), versus nine days (SD 26) in January 2009 (p=0.35). Three of the 100 consultations (3%) in January 2005 were initiated in the ED, versus 4 of the 64 (6%) in January 2009. Conclusions: At an urban academic medical center with a well-developed palliative care service, the majority of palliative care consultations were for patients who arrive via the ED. Despite this, only a small minority of consultations originated from emergency providers and consultation was on average initiated days into a patient's hospital stay. © Copyright 2012, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc.
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CITATION STYLE
Grudzen, C. R., Hwang, U., Cohen, J. A., Fischman, M., & Morrison, R. S. (2012). Characteristics of emergency department patients who receive a palliative care consultation. Journal of Palliative Medicine, 15(4), 396–399. https://doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2011.0376
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