Thomas Jefferson University Hospital, Philadelphia, PA
Matthew Tucker, Dayna Hovern, John Liantonio, Elizabeth Collins, Adam F Binder
Background: End-of-life care in the typical hospital setting has several drawbacks including lack of interdisciplinary hospice teams, less comfortable environments, and lack of provider experience. In addition, patients at the end of their life are often severely symptomatic and imminently dying and thus have barriers to appropriate disposition. Few studies have explored the outcomes of patients placed on comfort care with respect to hospice disposition. The objective of this study was to perform a retrospective analysis of patients who transitioned to comfort care at Thomas Jefferson University Hospital (TJUH) to better understand the ultimate disposition of patients placed on comfort care. Methods: We conducted a retrospective study of patients placed on the comfort care order set between July 1st, 2021, until June 30th, 2022. A report of all patients placed on our institutions “comfort care order set” was run using Qlik analytics and data platform. Each individual patient chart was then analyzed to collect multiple clinical variables, including diagnoses, palliative care involvement, time on comfort care, hospital length of stay (in total and after comfort care order set placed), healthcare utilization prior to hospitalization, and IV medications used for symptom management. Participants were limited to those 18 years or older. IRB approval was obtained as per institutional guidelines. Results: 541 patients were included in the analysis. 424 (78.37%) patients died while still admitted to the hospital. This amounts to 1.5 patients a day requiring comfort care support. 60% of patients on comfort care were in the intensive care unit (ICU). The ICU population spent on average 11.04 (+/- 24) hours on comfort care. 19% of these patients were on comfort care for longer than 12 hours. Subspecialty and hospital medicine patients were on comfort care for 3.3 (+/- 3.3) days and 5 (+/- 9.5) days respectively. Within oncology patients, the average time was 3 (+/- 2.4) days. 94% of the patients placed on comfort care in the ICU died in the hospital as compared to 53% of subspecialty and 59% of hospital medicine patients. 40% of non-ICU patients were discharged with hospice services. The average length of stay for the study population was 12.5 (+/- 13.0) days. Conclusions: The majority of patients placed on comfort care died during their hospitalization demonstrating a real need for comprehensive end of life care and immediate hospice services for our patient population. For those discharged with hospice services, they spent an excessive amount of time in the hospital waiting for services to be arranged. Establishing a hospital based inpatient hospice unit has the potential to improve the patient and family experience, provide better end of life care, and reduce length of stay. Previous studies have also demonstrated decreased costs. Ongoing work is underway at our institution to provide optimal end of life care for this patient population.
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Abstract Disclosures
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