Use of Palliative Care Services in a Tertiary Cancer Center

Author:

Dalal Shalini1,Bruera Sebastian2,Hui David1,Yennu Sriram1,Dev Rony1,Williams Janet1,Masoni Charles1,Ihenacho Ijeoma1,Obasi Emmanuel1,Bruera Eduardo1

Affiliation:

1. a Department of Palliative Care and Rehabilitation Medicine, University of Texas MD Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, USA

2. b Department of Internal Medicine, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, USA

Abstract

Abstract Background. Despite increasing prevalence of palliative care (PC) services in cancer centers, most referrals to the service occur exceedingly late in the illness trajectory. Over the years, we have made several attempts to promote earlier patient access to our PC program, such as changing the name of our service from PC to supportive care (SC). This study was conducted to determine the use of PC/SC service over the past 8 years. Methods. We reviewed billing data for all PC/SC encounters. We examined five metrics for use: inpatient consultations as a percentage of hospital admissions, ratio of inpatient consultations to average number of operational beds, time from hospital registration to outpatient consultation, time from advanced cancer diagnosis to consultation, and time from first outpatient consultation to death/last follow-up. Results. Over the years, we found a consistent increase in patient referrals to the PC/SC program. In the inpatient setting, we found approximate doubling of the inpatient consultations as a percentage of hospital admissions and the ratio of inpatient consultations to hospital beds (from 10% to 19% and from 2.4 to 4.9, respectively; p < .001). In the outpatient setting, we observed variations in referral pattern between oncology services, but, overall, the time from consultation to death/last follow-up increased from 4.8 months to 7.9 months (p = .001), which was accompanied by a significant decrease in the interval to consultation from hospital registration and advanced cancer diagnosis (p < .001). Conclusion. We have observed a consistent annual increase in new patient referrals as well as earlier access for outpatient referrals to our SC service, supporting increased use of palliative care at our cancer center.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

American Cancer Society Mentored Research Scholar Grant

Clinical Research

National Institutes of Health Grants

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cancer Research,Oncology

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