Journal of palliative medicine
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There is often little information on long-term prognosis available for Emergency Medicine physicians when decisions on admission, treatment, or consultations are being made for patients. There is a new focus to understand if palliative support should be offered in the emergency department (ED) and the Palliative Performance Scale (PPS), a screening tool used in other settings in palliative care, has been little used in the ED. ⋯ In this small preliminary study, The PPS score may predict survival in patients admitted to the hospital through the ED. The ease of use holds promise that use of the PPS in the ED may help ED physicians predict survival and plan for better disposition, advocate for patient wishes, and initiate palliative care consultation.
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Honoring the wishes of cancer patients is a responsibility of oncologists; however, end-of-life care (EOLC) discussions are frequently delayed past the point of usefulness. ⋯ A seven-item patient-centric PRO instrument was able to separate advanced malignancy patients into cohorts who their physicians deemed were at differing stages in their cancer journey with increasing needs for advance care planning. A study to determine if the threshold scores identified in this pilot correlate with palliative/EOL consultation frequency and patient survival is underway.