Abstract

In palliative medicine planning in advance is important for critical care situations. It is highly significant to make useful and by the patient and his relatives desired decisions. These concern transport in asituation of crisis and the venue of death (either death at home or transfer to ahospital).In this study the effect of anew Emergency Information Form about the place of death was examined. The used Emergency Information Form enabled the patient to express awish on transfer in the case of crisis in advance and communicate this wish to the Emergency system.Atotal of 858 patients, taken care of by the mobile palliative-team Hartberg/Weiz/Vorau in the period from 2010 to 2015, were included in the study. The Intervention group-the patients for whom an Emergency Information Form was established-counted 38patients. Data analysis was retrospective, pseudo anonymized and external.The 4 most important results were:1)The Emergency Information Form increased the probability for the intervention group to die at home (intervention group: 72.2%, controll group1: 53.0%, controll group2: 56.6%).2)Important in this change was, that the opinion of the patients was considered. The decision made in the Emergency Information Form correlated with ahigh significance (p = 0.01) with the actual place of death.3)Furthermore, it came clear that the Emergency Information Form was auseful tool to handle the utilization of special facilities. Within the intervention group young patients (with alot of symptoms) died in aspecial facility more often than old patients. These, rather geriatric people, were mostly brought to ageneral hospital.4)There was no significant relation between the duration of care and the probability that an Emergency Information Form was established (p = 0.63). However, there was ahigh significance between the number of home visits and the probability that an Emergency Information Form was written (p = 0.02).Due to the fact that there was asmall intervention group restricted to only one palliative team further studies could help to make clear advises for palliative teams regarding scope, duration and frequency of home-visits. Thus the term "care continuity" could be concretized in the guidelines.The study brought forward that numerous (and short) contacts with the patient were more convenient than less but long home-visits in order to fulfil the patients wish concerning his place of death.

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