When there are no good choices: illuminating the borderland between proportionate palliative sedation and palliative sedation to unconsciousness.
نویسندگان
چکیده
BACKGROUND Despite state-of-the-art palliative care, some patients will require proportionate palliative sedation as a last-resort option to relieve intolerable suffering at the end of life. In this practice, progressively increasing amounts of sedation are provided until the target suffering is sufficiently relieved. Uncertainty and debate arise when this practice approaches palliative sedation to unconsciousness (PSU), especially when unconsciousness is specifically intended or when the target symptoms are more existential than physical. METHODS We constructed a case series designed to highlight some of the common approaches and challenges associated with PSU and the more aggressive end of the spectrum of proportionate palliative sedation as retrospectively identified by palliative care consultants over the past 5 years from a busy inpatient palliative care service at a tertiary medical center in Rochester (NY, USA). RESULTS Ten cases were identified as challenging by the palliative care attendings, of which four were selected for presentation for illustrative purposes because they touched on central issues including loss of capacity, the role of existential suffering, the complexity of clinical intention, the role of an institutional policy and use of anesthetics as sedative agents. Two other cases were selected focusing on responses to two special situations: a request for PSU that was rejected; and anticipatory planning for total sedation in the future. CONCLUSION Although relatively rare, PSU and more aggressive end-of-the-spectrum proportionate palliative sedation represent responses to some of the most challenging cases faced by palliative care clinicians. These complex cases clearly require open communication and collaboration among caregivers, patients and family. Knowing how to identify these circumstances, and how to approach these interventions of last resort are critical skills for practitioners who take care of patients at the end of life.
منابع مشابه
Intentional sedation to unconsciousness at the end of life: findings from a national physician survey.
CONTEXT The terms "palliative sedation" and "terminal sedation" have been used to refer to both proportionate palliative sedation, in which unconsciousness is a foreseen but unintended side effect, and palliative sedation to unconsciousness, in which physicians aim to make their patients unconscious until death. It has not been clear to what extent palliative sedation to unconsciousness is acce...
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TO THE EDITOR: We read with great interest the article by Quill and colleagues (1), which presented and discussed 3 categories of palliative sedation: ordinary sedation, proportionate palliative sedation (PPS), and palliative sedation to unconsciousness (PSU). One notion shared by these practices, and by all attempts to justify sedation, is that the degree of sedation should match the symptoms—...
متن کاملLast-resort options for palliative sedation.
Despite receiving state-of-the-art palliative care, some patients still experience severe suffering toward the end of life. Palliative sedation is a potential way to respond to such suffering, but access is uneven and unpredictable, in part because of confusion about different kinds of sedation. Proportionate palliative sedation (PPS) uses the minimum amount of sedation necessary to relieve ref...
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BACKGROUND Palliative sedation involves the use of sedative medication to relieve refractory symptoms in patients by reducing their level of consciousness. Although it is considered an acceptable clinical practice from most ethical points of view, palliative sedation is still a widely debated procedure and merits better understanding. METHODS The relevant medical literature pertaining to pall...
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Although there are various types of sedation, including intermittent and respite sedation, and sedation as a side effect of medications such as opioids,2 continuous palliative sedation therapy (CPST) at or near the end of life is the focus of this article. Continuous palliative sedation therapy is the use of ongoing sedation for symptom management, considered during the end of life when a patie...
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ورودعنوان ژورنال:
- Pain management
دوره 1 1 شماره
صفحات -
تاریخ انتشار 2011