Abstract

Increasing demand for palliative care unit (PCU) admissions has led to a stronger focus on discharge planning. This has resulted in shorter inpatient length of stays (LOS), and stable patients not requiring specialist palliative care services being referred for placement in residential aged care facilities (RACFs). The process of placement is time-consuming and can be distressing to patients and families, so RACF placement should only be proposed in patients whose prognosis is relatively good (i.e., weeks to months). Our aim was to identify the outcomes of palliative care inpatients referred for residential aged care placement. A retrospective chart audit was conducted. The patients' outcomes (discharge or death and survival time) were recorded and analyzed using SPSS statistical software. Subjects were 100 consecutive inpatients from a 30-bed PCU who had been referred for RACF placement. Of the 100 patients referred for RACF placement 73 of 100 (73%) patients had a malignant diagnosis, whereas 27 (27%) had a noncancer diagnosis. Thirty-eight (38%) patients died before discharge, including 33 of 73 (45%) patients with cancer and 5 of 27 (13%) patients with nonmalignant conditions. In particular, 12 of 17 (71%) patients with metastatic non-small cell lung (NCSLC) cancer died before or soon after discharge. Over one-third of all patients died before discharge to an RACF could take place. The rate of death before discharge was higher among patients who had cancer. Patients suffering from NCSLC need to be more carefully selected for placement as only one-third of these patients survived to discharge.

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