TY - JOUR T1 - Palliative care for patients who died in emergency departments: analysis of a multicentre cross-sectional survey JF - Emergency Medicine Journal JO - Emerg Med J DO - 10.1136/emermed-2011-200513 SP - emermed-2011-200513 AU - Myriam Van Tricht AU - David Riochet AU - Eric Batard AU - Arnaud Martinage AU - Emmanuel Montassier AU - Gilles Potel AU - Philippe Le Conte Y1 - 2011/01/01 UR - http://emj.bmj.com/content/early/2011/09/29/emermed-2011-200513.abstract N2 - Objectives A growing number of patients die each year in hospital emergency departments (EDs). Decisions to withhold or to withdraw life-support therapies occur in 80% of patients as described in a multicentre cross-sectional survey including 2420 patients. Palliative care has not been explored in patients dying in this setting. The aim of this study was to assess the incidence of palliative care and to describe this population.Methods The authors conducted a post-hoc analysis on a cohort of 2420 patients who died in 174 French and Belgian EDs. The authors identified patients who benefited from palliative care and described this population and the palliative care.Results Palliative therapies were administered to 1373 patients (56.7%). These therapies included administration of analgesics, sedation, mouth care, repositioning for comfort (as appropriate) and provision of emotional support to the patient and his/her relatives. These palliative measures were provided more frequently in the observation unit of the ED (n=908, 66.2%) than in an examination room (n=465, 33.8%). Median time interval between ED admission and death was longer in patients who received palliative care (n=1373) (median, 15 h; first quartile, 6 h; third quartile, 34 h) than in those who did not (n=1047) (median, 4 h; first quartile, 1 h; third quartile, 10 h) (p<10−4).Conclusions Palliative care is administered to about half of the patients who die in EDs. This is insufficient as the majority of the patients who died in EDs actually died after a decision to withhold or withdraw life-support therapies. End-of-life management must be improved in EDs. ER -