A multicentre international study of sedation for uncontrolled symptoms in terminally ill patients

Title

A multicentre international study of sedation for uncontrolled symptoms in terminally ill patients

Creator

Fainsinger RL; Waller A; Bercovici M; Bengtson K; Landman W; Hosking M; Nunez-Olarte JM; deMoissac D

Publisher

Palliative Medicine

Date

2000

Subject

Female; Humans; Male; Analgesics; Aged; Middle Aged; Treatment Outcome; Drug Therapy; Non-U.S. Gov't; Research Support; Pain/drug therapy; Opioid/therapeutic use; Hypnotics and Sedatives/therapeutic use; Terminal Care/methods; Combination; Anti-Anxiety Agents/therapeutic use; Consciousness/drug effects; Delirium/drug therapy; Dyspnea/drug therapy; Midazolam/therapeutic use; Nausea/drug therapy

Description

The issue of symptom management at the end of life and the need to use sedation has become a controversial topic. This debate has been intensified by the suggestion that sedation may correlate with 'slow euthanasia'. The need to have more facts and less anecdote was a motivating factor in this multicentre study. Four palliative care programmes in Israel, South Africa, and Spain agreed to participate. The target population was palliative care patients in an inpatient setting. Information was collected on demographics, major symptom distress, and intent and need to use sedatives in the last week of life. Further data on level of consciousness, adequacy of symptom control, and opioids and psychotropic agents used during the final week of life was recorded. As the final week of life can be difficult to predict, treating physicians were asked to complete the data at the time of death. The data available for analysis included 100 patients each from Israel and Madrid, 94 patients from Durban, and 93 patients from Cape Town. More than 90% of patients required medical management for pain, dyspnoea, delirium and/or nausea in the final week of life. The intent to sedate varied from 15% to 36%, with delirium being the most common problem requiring sedation. There were variations in the need to sedate patients for dyspnoea, and existential and family distress. Midazolam was the most common medication prescribed to achieve sedation. The diversity in symptom distress, intent to sedate and use of sedatives, provides further knowledge in characterizing and describing the use of deliberate pharmacological sedation for problematic symptoms at the end of life. The international nature of the patient population studied enhances our understanding of potential differences in definition of symptom issues, variation of clinical practice, and cultural and psychosocial influences.
2000

Rights

Article information provided for research and reference use only. PedPalASCNET does not hold any rights over the resource listed here. All rights are retained by the journal listed under publisher and/or the creator(s).

Type

Journal Article

Citation List Month

Backlog

Citation

Fainsinger RL; Waller A; Bercovici M; Bengtson K; Landman W; Hosking M; Nunez-Olarte JM; deMoissac D, “A multicentre international study of sedation for uncontrolled symptoms in terminally ill patients,” Pediatric Palliative Care Library, accessed April 27, 2024, https://pedpalascnetlibrary.omeka.net/items/show/11822.