Top ten tips palliative care clinicians should know about intensive care unit consultation
Top ten tips palliative care clinicians should know about intensive care unit consultation
Journal of Palliative Medicine; by Ankita Mehta, Karen Bullock, Jillian L. Gustin, Rachel A. Hadler, Judith E. Nelson, William E. Rosa, Jennifer B. Seaman, Shelley E. Varner-Perez, Douglas B. White; 8/25
Critical illness and ICU stays can be extremely distressing for patients and their loved ones. Providing palliative care in the ICU, although a standard component of comprehensive care delivery, involves understanding the individual culture of each specific ICU, collaboration with multiple providers, and interfacing with surrogate decision makers while patients may not be able to communicate and are undergoing interventions that are unfamiliar to them and loved ones. These top ten tips aim to support palliative care clinicians providing consultation in ICUs. Specifically, these tips address initial relationship building with ICU clinicians and teams to foster effective collaboration, establishing goals of care by assessing health-related values, explaining treatment options, individualizing prognostic discussions, and managing end-of-life symptoms for patients while in the ICU and throughout ICU discharge transition.