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DECREASING PAIN, ANXIETY, AND CONFUSION IN TERMINALLY ILL VETERANS

Terminally ill patients often receive medications for pain and anxiety that result in sedation that may inhibit communication with their loved ones. Balancing comfort while maintaining meaningful communications is a common dilemma for patients, staff, and families. Many patients report confusion and...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Kresevic, Denise, Pallaki, Muralidhar, Wasil, Bridgette, Swanson, Marilyn, Burant, Christopher
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9771384/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.3054
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author Kresevic, Denise
Pallaki, Muralidhar
Wasil, Bridgette
Swanson, Marilyn
Burant, Christopher
author_facet Kresevic, Denise
Pallaki, Muralidhar
Wasil, Bridgette
Swanson, Marilyn
Burant, Christopher
author_sort Kresevic, Denise
collection PubMed
description Terminally ill patients often receive medications for pain and anxiety that result in sedation that may inhibit communication with their loved ones. Balancing comfort while maintaining meaningful communications is a common dilemma for patients, staff, and families. Many patients report confusion and a decreased ability to communicate with families and health care providers, resulting in fear, anger, and frustration. Additionally, family members (25 to 33%) also feel frustrated and angry not being able to communicate with their loved ones needs and wishes. Delirium, a distressing syndrome characterized by disturbed consciousness, reduced ability to focus attention, altered cognition is experienced by 62–88% of terminally ill patients. Unfortunately, it is often underdiagnosed and undertreated. While not all delirium can be prevented it is estimated that 50% of terminal delirium may be ameliorated. This project was designed to proactively identify terminally ill veteran preferences for nonpharmacological interventions to reduce pain, anxiety, and prevent delirium. In the sample of Veterans from an inpatient VAMC Hospice (n=31) the mean age was 79.46 (sd=10.69); 60.7% were Black and 39.3% were white; 60.9% had cancer and 27.6% had heart failure. The most common patient delirium related behaviors were verbal agitation, physical agitations, physical aggression, anxiety, and confusion. Veterans identified the following comfort priorities: decreased noise (82.6%) and lighting (82.6%), warm blankets (78.3%), music (65.2%), emotional support (73.9%), increased family involvement (43.5%) and (20.8%) going outdoors. Preventative individualized nonpharmacological interventions decreased disruptive delirium related behaviors over 95% of the time and should be incorporated into routine hospice care.
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spelling pubmed-97713842023-01-24 DECREASING PAIN, ANXIETY, AND CONFUSION IN TERMINALLY ILL VETERANS Kresevic, Denise Pallaki, Muralidhar Wasil, Bridgette Swanson, Marilyn Burant, Christopher Innov Aging Late Breaking Abstracts Terminally ill patients often receive medications for pain and anxiety that result in sedation that may inhibit communication with their loved ones. Balancing comfort while maintaining meaningful communications is a common dilemma for patients, staff, and families. Many patients report confusion and a decreased ability to communicate with families and health care providers, resulting in fear, anger, and frustration. Additionally, family members (25 to 33%) also feel frustrated and angry not being able to communicate with their loved ones needs and wishes. Delirium, a distressing syndrome characterized by disturbed consciousness, reduced ability to focus attention, altered cognition is experienced by 62–88% of terminally ill patients. Unfortunately, it is often underdiagnosed and undertreated. While not all delirium can be prevented it is estimated that 50% of terminal delirium may be ameliorated. This project was designed to proactively identify terminally ill veteran preferences for nonpharmacological interventions to reduce pain, anxiety, and prevent delirium. In the sample of Veterans from an inpatient VAMC Hospice (n=31) the mean age was 79.46 (sd=10.69); 60.7% were Black and 39.3% were white; 60.9% had cancer and 27.6% had heart failure. The most common patient delirium related behaviors were verbal agitation, physical agitations, physical aggression, anxiety, and confusion. Veterans identified the following comfort priorities: decreased noise (82.6%) and lighting (82.6%), warm blankets (78.3%), music (65.2%), emotional support (73.9%), increased family involvement (43.5%) and (20.8%) going outdoors. Preventative individualized nonpharmacological interventions decreased disruptive delirium related behaviors over 95% of the time and should be incorporated into routine hospice care. Oxford University Press 2022-12-20 /pmc/articles/PMC9771384/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.3054 Text en © The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Late Breaking Abstracts
Kresevic, Denise
Pallaki, Muralidhar
Wasil, Bridgette
Swanson, Marilyn
Burant, Christopher
DECREASING PAIN, ANXIETY, AND CONFUSION IN TERMINALLY ILL VETERANS
title DECREASING PAIN, ANXIETY, AND CONFUSION IN TERMINALLY ILL VETERANS
title_full DECREASING PAIN, ANXIETY, AND CONFUSION IN TERMINALLY ILL VETERANS
title_fullStr DECREASING PAIN, ANXIETY, AND CONFUSION IN TERMINALLY ILL VETERANS
title_full_unstemmed DECREASING PAIN, ANXIETY, AND CONFUSION IN TERMINALLY ILL VETERANS
title_short DECREASING PAIN, ANXIETY, AND CONFUSION IN TERMINALLY ILL VETERANS
title_sort decreasing pain, anxiety, and confusion in terminally ill veterans
topic Late Breaking Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9771384/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/geroni/igac059.3054
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