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PEDIATRIC PALLIATIVE CARE

DR. LIZA C. MANALO, M.Sc.
PALLIATIVE CARE
Philippines
FOUR DOMAINS
PHYSICAL
SYMPTOMS

PSYCHOLOGICAL
SYMPTOMS

PALLIATIVE CARE
SOCIAL NEEDS

EXISTENTIAL OR
SPIRITUAL NEEDS
DOMAINS OF QUALITY PALLIATIVE CARE
Domain 1: Structure and Processes of Care
Domain 2: Physical Aspects of Care
Domain 3: Psychological and Psychiatric Aspects of Care
Domain 4: Social Aspects of Care
Domain 5: Spiritual, Religious and Existential Aspects of Care
Domain 6: Cultural Aspects of Care
Domain 7: Care of the Imminently Dying Patient
DOMAINS OF QUALITY PALLIATIVE CARE
Domain 2:
Physical Aspects
of Care

Symptom Control
PAIN or DYSPNEA
WHO 3-step Analgesic Ladder
Step 1: Non-opioids
Step 2: Weak Opioids
Step 3: Strong Opioids

Morphine
 Neonates (<1 month) : 500microgram/kg/24hr 4 hrly divided doses
 Infants: <1 yr = 500microgram/kg/24hr 4 hrly divided doses
1 – 2 yrs=1mg/kg/24hr 4 hrly divided doses



Children:

2-12yrs=1mg/kg/24hr 4 hrly divided doses
>12 yrs=30mg/24hr 4 hrly divided doses
orally, SL, PR, round the clock

- Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004

http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
Opioids for Palliation of Dyspnea
The exact mechanism is unclear.
 The drugs' cardiovascular effects are thought to be most likely
responsible for relieving dyspnea.
 Therapeutic doses of opioids:
 produce peripheral vasodilation
 reduce peripheral vascular resistance
 inhibit baro receptor responses
 decrease brainstem responsiveness to carbon dioxide
(the primary mechanism of opioid induced respiratory
depression)
 lessen the reflex vasoconstriction caused by increased
blood PCO2 levels so that the perception of dyspnea is
reduced
 Furthermore, opioids reduce the anxiety associated with
dyspnea.

CONSTIPATION


Due to use of opioids

MAINSTAYS OF THERAPY
Stimulant (e.g. senna syrup)
 Bisacodyl: 1 mo. – 2 yr 5 mg as single daily dose, oral or PR
2-12 yrs = 5 mg as single daily dose , oral or PR
>12 yrs=10 mg as single daily dose , oral or PR
Osmotic Laxatives
 Lactulose: 1 mo. – 1 yr =2.5 ml/24 hr 12 hrly divided doses
1-2 yrs= 5 ml/24 hr 12 hrly divided doses
2-5 yrs = 5 ml/24 hr 12- hrly divided doses
5-12 yrs = 10 ml/24 hr 12- hrly divided doses
>12 yrs = 20 ml/24 hr 12- hrly divided doses
- Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
NAUSEA
 Prochlorperazine - 0.1 to 0.15 mg/KBW orally
or PR q6-8h
 Ondansetron
for children 2-12 yrs: 0.15 mg/KBW orally or
IV q6-8h PRN

- Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
AGITATION
Lorazepam
 Midazolam (SC)
Children (1 mo - 12 yrs): 150 microgram/kg as a
single loading dose; 1 mg/kg/24 hr continuous SC
infusion
 Haloperidol (oral, SC)
Children (1 mo – 12 yrs) 25 microgram /kg/ 24 hr
12- hrly divided doses
>12 yrs = 1 mg as single daily dose


- Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
Pruritus
Diphenhydramine
Children 2-12 yrs: 5 mg/kg/day divided q4-6h
IV/PO

- Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
Seizures
Diazepam
Infants (1 mo

– 2 yrs): 200 microgram/kg/24hr, 12 hrly divided dose, oral
400 microgram/kg, IV, titrated
Children 2-12 yrs = 1mg/24 once daily, oral
>12yrs=3-5mg /24hr once daily, oral

2-12 yrs= 400 microgram/kg IV, titrated
>12 yrs=5-10 mg IV, titrated
 Maximum

10 mg as a single dose. Repeat after 5-10 mins if necessary.

- Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
Secretions
Hyoscine butyl bromide (SC)
Infant (1 mo – 2 yrs): 1.5 mg/kg/24 hr
Children 2-5 yrs=15 mg/24 hr
6-12 yrs = 30 mg/24 hr
q6h- q8h divided doses or as
continuous SC infusion

- Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
Domain 5: Spiritual, Religious and Existential
Aspects of Care
DEVELOPMENT OF DEATH CONCEPTS & SPIRITUALITY IN
CHILDREN
>6-12 years old
 Characteristics: Has concrete thoughts
 Predominant concepts of death:






Development of adult concepts of death
Understands that death can be personal
Interested in physiology and details of death

Spiritual Development




Faith concerns right and wrong
May accept external interpretations as the truth
Connects ritual with personal identity
Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
Domain 5: Spiritual, Religious and Existential
Aspects of Care
DEVELOPMENT OF DEATH CONCEPTS & SPIRITUALITY
IN CHILDREN
>6-12 years old
 Interventions:








Evaluate child’s fear of abandonment
Be truthful
Provide concrete details if requested
Support child’s efforts to achieve control and mastery
Maintain access to peers
Allow child to participate in decision-making
Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
Realities of Childhood Grief
 Dying children know they are dying; adult denial
is ineffective in the face of children’s emotional
perceptiveness
 Dying children experience fear, loneliness, &
anxiety
 Dying children worry, may try to put their affairs
in order, may strive to protect their parents, &
fear being forgotten
 Dying children need honest answers and
unconditional love and support
Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
COMMUNICATION


Communication skills




Appropriate and effective sharing of information, active
listening
Empathic and effective communication skills are essential
Organized and effective procedure for communicating bad
news with 6 steps goes by the acronym SPIKES
SPIKES Protocol for Breaking the Bad News
 Setting

 Perception of the patient and/or family: Find out how
much the patient and/or family knows
 Invitation: Find out how much the patient wants to know
 Knowledge: Share the information
 Empathy

 Strategy/Summary
- Buckman RA, Community Oncology
March/April 2005
Advance Care Planning




Part of the standard of care involved in the care of
patients with life-threatening conditions
It is our responsibility to initiate these discussions, rather
than wait for patients and family members to ask.
These discussions should occur early and regularly
throughout the course of treatment, ideally before crises
arise, and as the goals of care are clarified or change
over time. Decisions should be reviewed and revised on
a regular basis as the medical condition and knowledge
of treatment and prognosis evolve.
Advance Care Planning




Clarification of wishes regarding emergency and lifesustaining therapies including CPR vs. DNR should be
obtained and documented so that these advance
directives can be communicated with others, such as
home care workers and schools.
Paediatric palliative care professionals should be
involved early in discussions of treatment goals.
Discussions about palliative care should take place well
before the paediatric patient is at imminent risk of dying.
Any life-sustaining treatment…
 Resuscitation (CPR)

 Diagnostic tests

 Elective intubation,

 Artificial nutrition,

mechanical ventilation
 Surgery
 Dialysis, Hemofiltration
 Blood transfusions, blood

products

(parenteral or enteral) or
hydration (IVF)
 Antibiotics
 Vasopressors
 Future hospital, ICU

admissions

…aimed at maintaining organ function that only
prolong death may be withdrawn or withheld
POPE JOHN PAUL II :
Clarify the substantive moral difference between
Discontinuing medical
procedures that may be
burdensome, dangerous, or
disproportionate to the
expected outcome
> "the refusal of 'over-zealous'
treatment"

Taking away the proportionate
means of preserving life, such as
ordinary feeding, hydration, and
normal medical care
DOMAINS OF QUALITY PALLIATIVE CARE
Domain 7: Care of the Imminently Dying Patient











Communication
Site of care
Resuscitation
Nutrition and fluids
Cessation of oral medications
Adequacy of analgesia
Management of distress
& unrelieved symptoms
Noisy breathing
Care issues
Duties after patient death
Overview of Care of Patients Imminently Dying
from Advanced Cancers


Learn to enjoy small accomplishments, and
teach that skill to patients and their families.


It is not always possible to eradicate every
symptom, but it is usually possible to bring some
degree of relief.
“There is nothing more that can be done” does not exist
in the lexicon of palliative medicine
There is always something that can be done, even if it is
simply to sit beside the patient and hold her hand and
offer a few words of comfort and solidarity.
Recognition: “DIAGNOSIS OF DYING”
Signs & Symptoms of Death Approaching


Profound tiredness and weakness








Reduced intake of food & fluids



Drowsy or reduced cognition

Essentially bed bound
Reduced interest in getting out of bed
Needing assistance with all care
Less interest in things happening around
them








May be disoriented in time and place
Difficulty concentrating
Scarcely able to cooperate and converse
with carers

Gaunt appearance
Difficulty swallowing oral
medication
Guidelines for managing the last days of life in adults. 2006. The National Council for Hospices and
Specialist Palliative Care Services, London
Care During the Last Days and Hours of Life


Patients in the last days of life typically experience
extreme weakness and fatigue and become bedbound



“Death Rattle“ – noisy terminal respirations caused by the
presence of secretions in the airway (usually the upper
airway) in patients who are too weak to cough effectively



Hearing and touch
Care During the Last Days and Hours of Life


Patient decides whether to be cared for and to die in the
hospital, or at home




cardinal signs of death should be instructed to caregivers

Physician should establish a plan for who the family or
caregivers will contact when the patient is dying or has
died


Avoiding unnecessary admission
Care of the Imminently Dying Patient:
Medications
 Oral medications that are no longer necessary (e.g.,
laxatives, antibiotics) should be stopped.
 Medications that are needed to control ongoing
symptoms (e.g., pain, nausea, seizures) should be
given rectally or parenterally .
 When patients become anuric close to death,
continuous dosing may be discontinued in favor of
bolus dosing to prevent metabolite accumulation
and agitated delirium. - Weinstein, Arnold & Weissman, Fast Fact and
Concept #54: Opioid Infusions (www.eperc.mcw.edu)
Care of the Imminently Dying Patient:
Nutrition & Hydration






During the last days of life, patients tend naturally to
take in less and less food and fluid.
Hunger is rare in the last days of life.
Thirst occurs more commonly, but without relation to
dehydration, and can usually be controlled by simple
measures (e.g., moistening the lips, giving small sips
of fluids or small amounts of crushed ice to suck).
Enteral feeding should be stopped when the patient
can no longer swallow reliably.
Care of the Imminently Dying Patient:
Hydration


In most cases, parenteral (IV) fluids should not be given in
the last hours of life.



Allowing the patient to become slightly dehydrated may
prevent or ameliorate many otherwise distressing problems in
the last hours:

Consequence of IV Hydration

Symptoms

↑ Respiratory secretions

Cough
Pulmonary congestion
Sensations of choking & drowning

↑ Urine Output

Bedwetting, bedpans, catheters

↑ Gastrointestinal secretions

Vomiting

↑ Total body water

↑ Edema, ascites, pleural effusions

↓ Serum urea

↑ Awareness

↑Distress, ↓Pain threshold
Psychosocial Support of the Patient and the
Family


In addition to anxiolytics, supportive counseling, spiritual
counseling, and family support can help counter feelings
of anxiety



At the moment of the patient’s death:




shock and loss and be emotionally distraught
assimilate the event and be comforted
Support of the Patient &
His Family During the Agonal Period

The nearer the patient approaches death, the more he
reaches out towards life…
Touch is often important, sitting close to him, holding his
hand, staying near him even without words…
All of these things make the chasm between the living and
the dead less terrifying and lonely...
- Hackett & Weisman, 1962
TASKS OF THE MULTIDISCIPLINARY
PALLIATIVE CARE TEAM
1) To see the patient & the family through
- the physical & emotional stages of terminal illness

2) To ease their burden along the way
- to walk alongside, not to give orders from above

3) To be there
- when symptoms arise, when hard questions have
- to be faced, when fear & loneliness threaten
TASKS OF THE MULTIDISCIPLINARY
PALLIATIVE CARE TEAM

 To apply to the care of
the dying

the same high standards of
clinical analysis & decisionmaking as are demanded in the
care of patients expected to
get well
“Death is not extinguishing the light;
it is putting out the lamp because the Dawn has come.”
- Rabindranath Tagore

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Palliative care for children

  • 1. PEDIATRIC PALLIATIVE CARE DR. LIZA C. MANALO, M.Sc. PALLIATIVE CARE Philippines
  • 3. DOMAINS OF QUALITY PALLIATIVE CARE Domain 1: Structure and Processes of Care Domain 2: Physical Aspects of Care Domain 3: Psychological and Psychiatric Aspects of Care Domain 4: Social Aspects of Care Domain 5: Spiritual, Religious and Existential Aspects of Care Domain 6: Cultural Aspects of Care Domain 7: Care of the Imminently Dying Patient
  • 4. DOMAINS OF QUALITY PALLIATIVE CARE Domain 2: Physical Aspects of Care Symptom Control
  • 5. PAIN or DYSPNEA WHO 3-step Analgesic Ladder Step 1: Non-opioids Step 2: Weak Opioids Step 3: Strong Opioids Morphine  Neonates (<1 month) : 500microgram/kg/24hr 4 hrly divided doses  Infants: <1 yr = 500microgram/kg/24hr 4 hrly divided doses 1 – 2 yrs=1mg/kg/24hr 4 hrly divided doses  Children: 2-12yrs=1mg/kg/24hr 4 hrly divided doses >12 yrs=30mg/24hr 4 hrly divided doses orally, SL, PR, round the clock - Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004 http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
  • 6. Opioids for Palliation of Dyspnea The exact mechanism is unclear.  The drugs' cardiovascular effects are thought to be most likely responsible for relieving dyspnea.  Therapeutic doses of opioids:  produce peripheral vasodilation  reduce peripheral vascular resistance  inhibit baro receptor responses  decrease brainstem responsiveness to carbon dioxide (the primary mechanism of opioid induced respiratory depression)  lessen the reflex vasoconstriction caused by increased blood PCO2 levels so that the perception of dyspnea is reduced  Furthermore, opioids reduce the anxiety associated with dyspnea. 
  • 7. CONSTIPATION  Due to use of opioids MAINSTAYS OF THERAPY Stimulant (e.g. senna syrup)  Bisacodyl: 1 mo. – 2 yr 5 mg as single daily dose, oral or PR 2-12 yrs = 5 mg as single daily dose , oral or PR >12 yrs=10 mg as single daily dose , oral or PR Osmotic Laxatives  Lactulose: 1 mo. – 1 yr =2.5 ml/24 hr 12 hrly divided doses 1-2 yrs= 5 ml/24 hr 12 hrly divided doses 2-5 yrs = 5 ml/24 hr 12- hrly divided doses 5-12 yrs = 10 ml/24 hr 12- hrly divided doses >12 yrs = 20 ml/24 hr 12- hrly divided doses - Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004 http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
  • 8. NAUSEA  Prochlorperazine - 0.1 to 0.15 mg/KBW orally or PR q6-8h  Ondansetron for children 2-12 yrs: 0.15 mg/KBW orally or IV q6-8h PRN - Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004 http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
  • 9. AGITATION Lorazepam  Midazolam (SC) Children (1 mo - 12 yrs): 150 microgram/kg as a single loading dose; 1 mg/kg/24 hr continuous SC infusion  Haloperidol (oral, SC) Children (1 mo – 12 yrs) 25 microgram /kg/ 24 hr 12- hrly divided doses >12 yrs = 1 mg as single daily dose  - Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004 http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
  • 10. Pruritus Diphenhydramine Children 2-12 yrs: 5 mg/kg/day divided q4-6h IV/PO - Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004 http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
  • 11. Seizures Diazepam Infants (1 mo – 2 yrs): 200 microgram/kg/24hr, 12 hrly divided dose, oral 400 microgram/kg, IV, titrated Children 2-12 yrs = 1mg/24 once daily, oral >12yrs=3-5mg /24hr once daily, oral 2-12 yrs= 400 microgram/kg IV, titrated >12 yrs=5-10 mg IV, titrated  Maximum 10 mg as a single dose. Repeat after 5-10 mins if necessary. - Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004 http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
  • 12. Secretions Hyoscine butyl bromide (SC) Infant (1 mo – 2 yrs): 1.5 mg/kg/24 hr Children 2-5 yrs=15 mg/24 hr 6-12 yrs = 30 mg/24 hr q6h- q8h divided doses or as continuous SC infusion - Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004 http://fohs.bgu.ac.il/inpact/images/Documents/commondrugs.pdf
  • 13. Domain 5: Spiritual, Religious and Existential Aspects of Care DEVELOPMENT OF DEATH CONCEPTS & SPIRITUALITY IN CHILDREN >6-12 years old  Characteristics: Has concrete thoughts  Predominant concepts of death:     Development of adult concepts of death Understands that death can be personal Interested in physiology and details of death Spiritual Development    Faith concerns right and wrong May accept external interpretations as the truth Connects ritual with personal identity Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
  • 14. Domain 5: Spiritual, Religious and Existential Aspects of Care DEVELOPMENT OF DEATH CONCEPTS & SPIRITUALITY IN CHILDREN >6-12 years old  Interventions:       Evaluate child’s fear of abandonment Be truthful Provide concrete details if requested Support child’s efforts to achieve control and mastery Maintain access to peers Allow child to participate in decision-making Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
  • 15. Realities of Childhood Grief  Dying children know they are dying; adult denial is ineffective in the face of children’s emotional perceptiveness  Dying children experience fear, loneliness, & anxiety  Dying children worry, may try to put their affairs in order, may strive to protect their parents, & fear being forgotten  Dying children need honest answers and unconditional love and support Himelstein et al, N. Engl. J. Med, 2004
  • 16. COMMUNICATION  Communication skills    Appropriate and effective sharing of information, active listening Empathic and effective communication skills are essential Organized and effective procedure for communicating bad news with 6 steps goes by the acronym SPIKES
  • 17. SPIKES Protocol for Breaking the Bad News  Setting  Perception of the patient and/or family: Find out how much the patient and/or family knows  Invitation: Find out how much the patient wants to know  Knowledge: Share the information  Empathy  Strategy/Summary - Buckman RA, Community Oncology March/April 2005
  • 18. Advance Care Planning    Part of the standard of care involved in the care of patients with life-threatening conditions It is our responsibility to initiate these discussions, rather than wait for patients and family members to ask. These discussions should occur early and regularly throughout the course of treatment, ideally before crises arise, and as the goals of care are clarified or change over time. Decisions should be reviewed and revised on a regular basis as the medical condition and knowledge of treatment and prognosis evolve.
  • 19. Advance Care Planning   Clarification of wishes regarding emergency and lifesustaining therapies including CPR vs. DNR should be obtained and documented so that these advance directives can be communicated with others, such as home care workers and schools. Paediatric palliative care professionals should be involved early in discussions of treatment goals. Discussions about palliative care should take place well before the paediatric patient is at imminent risk of dying.
  • 20. Any life-sustaining treatment…  Resuscitation (CPR)  Diagnostic tests  Elective intubation,  Artificial nutrition, mechanical ventilation  Surgery  Dialysis, Hemofiltration  Blood transfusions, blood products (parenteral or enteral) or hydration (IVF)  Antibiotics  Vasopressors  Future hospital, ICU admissions …aimed at maintaining organ function that only prolong death may be withdrawn or withheld
  • 21. POPE JOHN PAUL II : Clarify the substantive moral difference between Discontinuing medical procedures that may be burdensome, dangerous, or disproportionate to the expected outcome > "the refusal of 'over-zealous' treatment" Taking away the proportionate means of preserving life, such as ordinary feeding, hydration, and normal medical care
  • 22. DOMAINS OF QUALITY PALLIATIVE CARE Domain 7: Care of the Imminently Dying Patient           Communication Site of care Resuscitation Nutrition and fluids Cessation of oral medications Adequacy of analgesia Management of distress & unrelieved symptoms Noisy breathing Care issues Duties after patient death
  • 23. Overview of Care of Patients Imminently Dying from Advanced Cancers  Learn to enjoy small accomplishments, and teach that skill to patients and their families.  It is not always possible to eradicate every symptom, but it is usually possible to bring some degree of relief.
  • 24. “There is nothing more that can be done” does not exist in the lexicon of palliative medicine There is always something that can be done, even if it is simply to sit beside the patient and hold her hand and offer a few words of comfort and solidarity.
  • 25. Recognition: “DIAGNOSIS OF DYING” Signs & Symptoms of Death Approaching  Profound tiredness and weakness      Reduced intake of food & fluids  Drowsy or reduced cognition Essentially bed bound Reduced interest in getting out of bed Needing assistance with all care Less interest in things happening around them      May be disoriented in time and place Difficulty concentrating Scarcely able to cooperate and converse with carers Gaunt appearance Difficulty swallowing oral medication Guidelines for managing the last days of life in adults. 2006. The National Council for Hospices and Specialist Palliative Care Services, London
  • 26. Care During the Last Days and Hours of Life  Patients in the last days of life typically experience extreme weakness and fatigue and become bedbound  “Death Rattle“ – noisy terminal respirations caused by the presence of secretions in the airway (usually the upper airway) in patients who are too weak to cough effectively  Hearing and touch
  • 27. Care During the Last Days and Hours of Life  Patient decides whether to be cared for and to die in the hospital, or at home   cardinal signs of death should be instructed to caregivers Physician should establish a plan for who the family or caregivers will contact when the patient is dying or has died  Avoiding unnecessary admission
  • 28. Care of the Imminently Dying Patient: Medications  Oral medications that are no longer necessary (e.g., laxatives, antibiotics) should be stopped.  Medications that are needed to control ongoing symptoms (e.g., pain, nausea, seizures) should be given rectally or parenterally .  When patients become anuric close to death, continuous dosing may be discontinued in favor of bolus dosing to prevent metabolite accumulation and agitated delirium. - Weinstein, Arnold & Weissman, Fast Fact and Concept #54: Opioid Infusions (www.eperc.mcw.edu)
  • 29. Care of the Imminently Dying Patient: Nutrition & Hydration     During the last days of life, patients tend naturally to take in less and less food and fluid. Hunger is rare in the last days of life. Thirst occurs more commonly, but without relation to dehydration, and can usually be controlled by simple measures (e.g., moistening the lips, giving small sips of fluids or small amounts of crushed ice to suck). Enteral feeding should be stopped when the patient can no longer swallow reliably.
  • 30. Care of the Imminently Dying Patient: Hydration  In most cases, parenteral (IV) fluids should not be given in the last hours of life.  Allowing the patient to become slightly dehydrated may prevent or ameliorate many otherwise distressing problems in the last hours: Consequence of IV Hydration Symptoms ↑ Respiratory secretions Cough Pulmonary congestion Sensations of choking & drowning ↑ Urine Output Bedwetting, bedpans, catheters ↑ Gastrointestinal secretions Vomiting ↑ Total body water ↑ Edema, ascites, pleural effusions ↓ Serum urea ↑ Awareness ↑Distress, ↓Pain threshold
  • 31. Psychosocial Support of the Patient and the Family  In addition to anxiolytics, supportive counseling, spiritual counseling, and family support can help counter feelings of anxiety  At the moment of the patient’s death:   shock and loss and be emotionally distraught assimilate the event and be comforted
  • 32. Support of the Patient & His Family During the Agonal Period The nearer the patient approaches death, the more he reaches out towards life… Touch is often important, sitting close to him, holding his hand, staying near him even without words… All of these things make the chasm between the living and the dead less terrifying and lonely... - Hackett & Weisman, 1962
  • 33. TASKS OF THE MULTIDISCIPLINARY PALLIATIVE CARE TEAM 1) To see the patient & the family through - the physical & emotional stages of terminal illness 2) To ease their burden along the way - to walk alongside, not to give orders from above 3) To be there - when symptoms arise, when hard questions have - to be faced, when fear & loneliness threaten
  • 34. TASKS OF THE MULTIDISCIPLINARY PALLIATIVE CARE TEAM  To apply to the care of the dying the same high standards of clinical analysis & decisionmaking as are demanded in the care of patients expected to get well
  • 35. “Death is not extinguishing the light; it is putting out the lamp because the Dawn has come.” - Rabindranath Tagore