Metadata
Title
Care Intensity and Palliative Care in Chronically Critically Ill Infants
Authors
Deming RS; Mazzola E; MacDonald J; Manning S; Beight L; Currie ER; Wojcik MH; Wolfe J. Care Intensity and Palliative Care in Chronically Critically Ill Infants
Year
2022
Publication
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management
Abstract
ABSTRACT Context Increasingly, chronically critically ill (CCI) infants survive to discharge from Neonatal Intensive Care Units (NICUs). Little is known about their care intensity and the primary and specialty palliative care families receive at and following discharge. Objectives To describe care intensity and primary and specialty palliative care received by NICU CCI infants at discharge and one year. Methods Chart abstraction of CCI infants at three academic centers discharged at ≥42 weeks corrected gestational age with medical technology between 2016-2019, including demographics, care intensity, and primary and specialty palliative care received at discharge and one year. Results Among 273 infants, NICU median stays were 45 [IQR 23-92] days. Primary diagnoses included congenital/genetic conditions (68.5%), prematurity (28.2%), and birth events (3.3%). At discharge, surgical feeding tubes (75.1%) and tracheostomies (24.5%) were the most common technologies. Infants received a median of 6 [IQR 4-9] medications and were followed by a median of 8 [IQR 7-9] providers. At one year, 91.4% continued with one or more technologies, similar numbers of medications and specialty providers. In the NICU, nearly all families had social work involvement, 78.8% had chaplaincy and 53.8% child life; 19.8% received specialty palliative care consultation. At one year, only 13.2% were followed by palliative care. Conclusions CCI infants receive intensive medical care including multiple medical technologies, medications, and specialty follow up at discharge and remain complex at one year of life. Most receive primary interprofessional palliative care in the NICU, however these infants and their families may have limited access to specialty palliative care in the short- and long-term.
Authors
Beight L | Currie ER | Deming RS | MacDonald J | Manning S | Mazzola E | Wojcik MH | Wolfe J. Care Intensity and Palliative Care in Chronically Critically Ill Infants
MeSH
Child | Chronic Disease | Critical Illness | Critical Illness/th [Therapy] | Humans | Infant | Infant, Low Birth Weight | Infant, Newborn | Intensive Care Units, Neonatal | Palliative Care | Patient Discharge