Supportive Cardiology: Moving Palliative Care Upstream for Patients Living with Advanced Heart Failure

Warren Harris Lewin, Wendy Cheung, A. Nina Horvath, Shana Haberman, Archna Patel, Dorothy Sullivan

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

22 Scopus citations

Abstract

Heart failure (HF) affects ∼600,000 Canadians and is a chronic, life-limiting illness marked by exacerbations of distressing symptoms requiring acute medical management, typically sought in Canada's emergency departments. HF often has an unpredictable illness trajectory and is a chronic terminal illness with a poor prognosis. Patients living with advanced HF have difficulty in accessing palliative care (PC) supports, which can result in unnecessary suffering as their HF progresses and they near end of life (EOL). This is, in part, due to a lack of research, helping clinicians to identify patients who are approaching EOL. In addition, the unpredictable nature of illness progression often precludes access to most EOL resources in our current prognosis-dependent healthcare system. PC teams focus on optimizing quality of life through symptom management and ensure that care plans are congruent with patient and family preferences. A PC team was embedded into our institution's existing HF team. Findings show that integration of an embedded model of PC delivery for patients living with advanced HF led to overwhelming positive patient and family feedback while providing timely advance care planning discussions that may be associated with beneficial patient, family, and system outcomes. These outcomes can be used to inform public policy and speak to a cost-effective patient and family-centered approach for providing care to individuals and families living with advanced HF.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)1112-1119
Number of pages8
JournalJournal of Palliative Medicine
Volume20
Issue number10
DOIs
StatePublished - Oct 2017

Keywords

  • heart failure
  • palliative care
  • supportive cardiology

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