Publication | Closed Access
Palliative Sedation at the End of Life
17
Citations
10
References
2015
Year
Palliative CareCritical Care MedicineHospiceEnd-of-life CareLongevitySymptomatic TreatmentPatient SafetyRefractory SymptomsEnd-of-life IssuePain ManagementPharmacotherapyIsraeli HospiceTerminal IllnessAnesthesiaMedicineAnesthesiologyPalliative Sedation
Palliative sedation (PS) is indicated for refractory symptoms among dying patients. This retrospective descriptive study examines PS in an Israeli hospice. Palliative sedation was defined as PS to unconsciousness (PSU), PS proportionate to symptoms (proportional palliative sedation [PPS]), or intermittent PS (IPS). Among 179 patients who died during 2012, PS was used among 21.2% (n = 38): (PSU 34.2%, PPS 34.2%, and IPS 31.6%), using midazolam (n = 33/38), halidol (21/38), and concurrent morphine (n = 35/38). Indications included agitation (71%), pain (36.8%), and dyspnea (21%). Survival following initiation of PS was 73 ± standard deviation 54 hours. No differences in survival were observed according to who initiated the decision to use PS (patients/medical staff/family) or type of PS (PSU/PPS/IPS). Survival following PS was longest with higher sedative doses, an observation that may help dispel fears concerning the use of PS to hasten death.
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