HHE Emergency and critical care 2019 | Page 6

EMERGENCY AND CRITICAL CARE End of life care for the older patient in the ED Few would dispute the importance of end of life care for patients and their families, but it is clear from the literature that in emergency departments, it is not always as good as it needs to be Mary Dawood RN BSc(Hons) MSc PGDip Imperial College Healthcare Trust, London, UK How people die remains in the memory of those who live on Dame Cecily Saunders (1918–2005), founder of the modern hospice movement End of life care (EoLC) is defined as enabling and supporting the palliative care needs of both patient and family to be identified and met throughout the last phase of life and into bereavement. It includes management of pain and other symptoms and provision of psychological, social, spiritual and practical support. 1 Few would dispute the importance of EoLC for patients and their families, but it is clear from the literature that EoLC for older patients in emergency departments (ED) is not always as good as it needs to be. 2 Indeed, Atul Gawande, the physician and author, believes our reluctance to honestly examine the experience of aging and dying has increased the harm we inflict on people denying them the basic comforts they most need. 3 This is a sad indictment but such is the paradox of modern medicine that more people are living longer, often with chronic disease which, for many, results in frequent admissions to the ED. Older patients are often referred to the ED from nursing homes and their own homes when staff or family feel unable to cope with increasing severity of symptoms; this happens even where advanced directives are in place. 4 With demand and need for inpatient beds far outweighing supply in most parts of the world, crowding in EDs is commonplace and sadly, but inevitably, some patients (particularly older patients) will end their days in the ED. It behoves us as caring professionals to urgently rethink our response to the needs of older patients dying in the ED so we are not denying them comfort and dignity in their last hours. The wrong place to die? There is a perception among ED professionals that the ED is “the wrong place to die”; this perception is understandable because the ED is traditionally designed to save lives, the focus being on saving lives rather than palliation. 5 Nonetheless in the current landscape this thinking is outdated and serves as both an excuse and an impediment to improving end of life care in the ED. Some ED physicians have expressed concerns over a lack of training and a lack of skills in caring for patients at the end of life. 6–9 Others have described helping someone die in conditions of comfort, dignity and respect as being one of the most gratifying clinical experiences, acknowledging that doing this in the ED is not easy. 10 Research suggests that nurses 6 HHE 2019 | hospitalhealthcare.com overall are comfortable providing EoLC in the ED but often grapple with inadequate staffing levels and the competing pressures of the ED, alongside delivering the care the older patient needs and deserves and the emotional labour this appropriates. 11,12 It would appear, however, that this professional view of the ED as being ‘the wrong place to die’ is not at altogether at odds with public perception and aspiration. Research globally has found that most people, when asked, would prefer to die in their own home surrounded by friends and families; however, most, particularly in the developed world anticipate they will die in hospital 13,14 Respecting dignity and autonomy Delivering good EoLC in the ED is achievable and irrespective of constraints older patients and their families are deserving of privacy, dignity and compassion at the most vulnerable point in their lives and we have a duty to try our utmost to achieve this. Central to good EoLC is having respect for the dignity and autonomy of the person; this ethos is