Ageing and End of Life Care Flashcards

1
Q

What is palliative care about?

A

Doing everything possible to support someone’s quality of life in the context of an incurable illness

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2
Q

What communication should take place in palliative care?

A

Proactive communication = recording and sharing discussions is essential

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3
Q

What are electronic advance care plans?

A

Created by GPs and shared with other professionals involved in patient care = called a Key Information Summary in Scotland

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4
Q

What patients should have a key information summary?

A

All patients identified with a life limiting illness who are at risk of decline

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5
Q

When is palliative care offered?

A

At any time from diagnosis = some patients have prognosis of many months or years

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6
Q

Where is most palliative care provided?

A

By hospitals, nursing homes and community teams = only tiny percentage die in hospice

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7
Q

Why do specialist palliative care teams exist?

A

Some patients with complex needs require additional support by teams with specialist experience in providing palliative care

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8
Q

What are some examples of specialist palliative care services?

A

Hospices, community palliative care teams and hospital palliative care teams

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9
Q

What is step 1 for pain management?

A

Mild pain = paracetamol 1g 4x daily +/- NSAID +/- other adjuvant

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10
Q

What is step 2 for pain management?

A

Moderate pain = codeine 30-60mg 4x daily or cocodomol 4x daily +/- neoadjuvant

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11
Q

What is step 3 for pain management?

A

Severe pain = stop codeine and switch to strong opioid (usually morphine) +/- paracetamol/NSAIDs/adjuvants

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12
Q

How is morphine given for background pain?

A

Modified release = 2x daily tablet

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13
Q

How is morphine given for breakthrough pain?

A

Immediate release = PRN tablet or liquid (oramorph)

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14
Q

What is the maximum dose of morphine?

A

No maximum dose but monitor pain to make sure morphine is helping and that there are no unwanted side effects

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15
Q

What patients are likely to suffer withdrawal if their morphine is stopped?

A

Those established on morphine = opioid tolerant

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16
Q

What are the symptoms of morphine toxicity?

A

Hallucinations, myoclonus, drowsiness

17
Q

Why must renal function be considered in a patient with morphine toxicity?

A

Morphine undergoes renal excretion = if renal function impaired then morphine will accumulate

18
Q

What is a severe side effect of morphine toxicity?

A

Respiratory depression

19
Q

What is used to reverse morphine toxicity?

A

Naloxone

20
Q

What are some signs that someone is dying?

A

Worsening weakness and performance status
Worsening physiological status with no reversibility
Struggling to manage oral medicines
Losing interest in food and fluid
Sleeping more, eventual unconsciousness

21
Q

What are some conditions that mimic dying?

A

Opioid/drug toxicity, sepsis, hypercalcaemia, AKI, hypoglycaemia

22
Q

How is comfort maintained when someone is dying?

A

Only essential medications continued
Oral medications converted to alternative route where possible if no swallow
Anticipatory medications given for common problems

23
Q

What is the benefit of syringe drivers?

A

Smoothest delivery of medicines = gives subcutaneous infusion

24
Q

What are some features of syringe drivers?

A

Access via butterfly needle with connector tubing
Up to 3 medicines can be mixed in syringe
Infused over 24 hrs and changed daily

25
Q

Is subcutaneous morphine the same strength as oral morphine?

A

No = subcutaneous morphine is twice as strong as oral morphine

26
Q

How is the dose of subcutaneous morphine needed calculated?

A

Divide total daily oral morphine dose by 2

27
Q

What are some examples of anticipatory prescribing?

A

Pain or SOB = morphine 2mg subcutaneous hourly
Distress = midazolam 2mg subcutaneous hourly
Nausea = levomepromazine 2.5mg subcutaneous 12hr
Secretions = buscopan 20mg subcutaneously hourly

28
Q

What are Just in Case boxes?

A

Used for subcutaneous symptom control at home to prevent delays in symptom relief

29
Q

Why is mouth care important in the final days of life?

A

People become too weak to swallow food or water = keep mouth moist as symptomatic relief

30
Q

Are subcutaneous/IV fluids given when a patient can no longer swallow in the final days of life?

A

Not routinely = risks generally outweigh benefits

Can give artificial hydration if concerned about distress due to symptoms of thirst despite mouthcare

31
Q

Who can verify expected deaths?

A

Will usually be “Nurse can Verify”

32
Q

How do you verify a death?

A

Check for spontaneous movement
Check for reaction to voice and pain
Palpate at least 2 major pulses for 1 min
Inspect eyes for dryness, fixed dilated pupils, absence of corneal reflexes and clouding of cornea
Auscultate heart and lungs for 1 min

33
Q

What must be recorded when verify a death?

A

Date and time of death

Presence of pacemaker or other implantable devices

34
Q

What must be remembered when filling in a death certificate?

A

Check cause of death with senior and that reporting of death to procurator fiscal isn’t needed

35
Q

What information is made available to families once a relative has died?

A

Information packs = registering the death and getting a funeral director as key steps

36
Q

How audits the accuracy of death certificates?

A

Death certification review services