End-Of-Life Decision Making and Preparedness Planning Among Heart Failure Patients Hospitalized...
Heart FailureHeart failure is a chronic and frequently terminal illness associated with poor quality of life and high burden of morbidity, re-hospitalization, and cost. Accordingly, recent guideline updates have highlighted the need for improved focus on end-of-life and palliative care of advanced heart failure patients, in whom symptom burden can be high and treatment options are often limited. The aims of this study are to evaluate the feasibility of implementing a semi-structured, outpatient, nurse practitioner-led, educational supportive care intervention concerning multiple domains of end-of-life care not often included in regular, outpatient clinic visits.
End-of-Life Decisions in Surgical Intensive Care Medicine - The Relevance of Treatment Withholding...
Quality of LifeThe purpose of this retrospective observational study is to describe the sequence of ICU-therapies that are limited and to compare characteristics and the decision making process in surgical ICU-patients.
Reasons of Transfer in Emergency Units of Patients in End of Life Situation.
End of LifePalliative CareThis qualitative study aimed to describe and understand the factors leading to the admission in emergency unit of patients coming from their home, in an end of life situation. This study was conducted in the university hospital of Besançon, France. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with general practitioners and family members in order to understand the factors leading, from their points of view, to the admission in emergency unit whereas this hospitalization wasn't necessary.
Risk Evaluation for Support: Predicting Elder Life in the Community Tool (RESPECT)
DeathTo develop a mortality risk prediction model that can be applied to the wide spectrum of risks that are seen in the home care setting.
Brain Death Diagnosis at an Academic Tertiary Medical Care Center
Brain DeathThe aim of this study is to assess and survey the quality of the process required to diagnose brain death in adult patients. This study of adult patients diagnosed brain dead or suspected of having brain death on the ICUs at the University Hospital Basel will be purely observational.
Sudden Cardiac Death in Systemic Right Ventricle
Sudden Cardiac DeathCongenital Heart Disease1 moreIn complete transposition of the great arteries (TGA) with previous atrial switch repair, and congenitally corrected transposition of the great arteries (ccTGA), the morphological right ventricle and its tricuspid valve continue to support the systemic circulation. This results in late complications including including sudden death. This retrospective multicentric study aims to evaluate the prevalence of SCD in a contemporary population of patients with a systemic RV and identify specific risk factors for SCD and hemodynamically significant ventricular arrhythmia This registry records demographics, clinical, imaging data, electrophysiological and laboratory of patients with a sRV and a transposition of the great arteries Primary end points are defined by sudden cardiac death, near-miss sudden death, as well as sustained VT requiring defibrillation.
Near-death Experience in ICU Survivors
Critical IllnessNear-Death ExperienceThis observational study aims to describe the incidence of near-death experience (NDE) in patients who survived a critical illness. In order to help determine the potential risk factors of NDE, dissociative status and spirituality are also investigated. Finally, in patients who experienced NDE, a magnetic resonance imaging is performed to search for any structural modifications.
Computed Tomography Angiography Accuracy in Brain Death Diagnosis
Brain DeathThe purpose of this study is to assess the reliability of computed tomography angiography (CTA) to diagnose brain death, face of several conditions that make impossible to define such diagnosis using clinical criteria exclusively.
Palliative and End-of-life Care in Advanced Dementia: Evaluation of a Program of Organization of...
DementiaRationale: In Canada, as in most industrialized countries, Alzheimer's disease and other related dementia are increasingly prevalent in older people. At an advanced stage, institutionalization in a long-term care (LTC) setting will be the fate of a majority of patients. A structured palliative care approach is increasingly used for cancer patients, but is still rarely accessible in LTC institutions for older people with advanced or terminal dementia. This approach should include a more systematic detection and treatment of pain and other physical and psychological symptoms during the last weeks of life, as well as better communications between patients, families and care staff, particularly relating to advanced care directives. Objectives: The general objective of this study is to implement and evaluate a multidisciplinary and multidimensional program of palliative and end-of-life care for older persons with terminal dementia in LTC facilities. Methodology: The intervention program will include five components: daily involvement of a nurse from the regular staff in the LTC facility as a change agent; awareness sessions with administrators and staff on the importance of high quality palliative care in dementia; a training program for physicians and all the staff involved in direct care of patients; systematic discussions with families and distribution to families of a document on different aspects of palliative care in dementia; systematic clinical care by regular staff for the control of pain, respiratory symptoms and mouth care. The program will be implemented in two LTC settings (one in Quebec City and one in Sherbrooke, Quebec, Canada), and results will be compared with the LTC control settings where usual care will be applied without implementation of the program.
Risk Factors in the Initial Presentation of Specific Cardiovascular Disease Syndromes
Heart DiseasesCardiovascular Diseases14 moreCardiovascular disease (CVD) is an important public health problem that affects millions of people worldwide. Associations between risk factors, such as smoking, dyslipidaemia or hypertension, and prevalent CVD are well documented. However, few studies have investigated associations with onset of disease. The initial manifestation of CVD, for example an episode of unstable angina, is important because it influences the prognosis, the quality of life and the management of disease. Furthermore, the extent to which social deprivation, alcohol consumption or atrial fibrillation affects presentation of CVD is poorly understood and deserves further consideration. Most previous studies have considered CVD as a single entity. However, differences in aetiology between coronary phenotypes suggest that risk factors may not be shared across specific coronary phenotypes and their relative importance is likely to differ for each phenotype. Gaining knowledge of these differences could provide insights into the pathophysiology of specific forms of CVD and could eventually lead to modification of recommendations for patient management and disease prevention. We propose to use the linkage of the national registry of coronary events to general practice records in the Clinical Practice Research Database (CPRD), to investigate whether demographic, behavioral, and clinico-metabolic risk factors differentially influence the onset of specific types of CVD.