• Wien Med Wochenschr · Nov 2011

    [The palliative treatment plan as basis for informed decisions in palliative or emergency care].

    • Wolfgang Lederer, Angelika Feichtner, and Elisabeth Medicus.
    • Universitätsklinik für Anästhesie und Intensivmedizin, Medizinische Universität Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria. wolfgang.lederer@i-med.ac.at
    • Wien Med Wochenschr. 2011 Nov 1;161(21-22):543-7.

    AbstractAcute vital crisis in end-of-life situations may result in a person being hospitalized and thus, expelled from his intimate environment, which aggravates the continuity of care. This entails a heavy burden for patients and necessitates an emergency medical services (EMS) call without recognizable benefit in many cases. Crisis episodes frequently mark the beginning of the dying process. Advance care planning or end-of-life care in elderly patients can help prevent such situations and ensure high contentment of patients, families and caregivers. Frequently, the question arises whether the burden arising from further hospitalization or from certain medical treatment options is reasonably balanced by the potential benefits of the steps taken. In such comprehensive care settings a custom-tailored palliative treatment plan may serve as an instrument for advance care planning. A palliative treatment plan set up by a physician together with a caregiver helps ensure that acute problems can be solved quickly and satisfactorily in the patient's customary surroundings. If EMS assistance is still needed, the emergency physician has written information on the patient's situation and can act quickly to meet the patient's immediate needs. This also means that EMS personnel must be properly trained in providing palliative care. In this way the palliative treatment plan can help caregivers continue to care for patients in their intimate surroundings.

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