Creation of a Neonatal End-of-Life Palliative Care Protocol

Author:

Catlin Anita,Carter Brian

Abstract

Objective:To create a protocol delineating the needs of patients, families, and staff necessary to provide a pain-free, dignified, family-, and staff-supported death for newborns who cannot benefit from intensive, life-extending, technological support.Study design:Using Internet e-mail, a Delphi study with sequential questionnaires soliciting participant response, investigator analysis, and follow-up responses from participants was conducted to build a consensus document. Institutional review was granted and respondents gave consent. Recruitment was conducted at medical, ethics, nursing, and multidisciplinary organization meetings. Synthesis of 16 palliative care/end-of-life protocols developed by regional, institutional, and parent organizations was included. Participants from 93 locations in the US and 4 abroad gave feedback to 13 questions derived from clinical experience and the literature. The data underwent four rounds of analysis with 95% retention of the 101 participants over an 18-month period.Results/Conclusion:Specific consensus-based recommendations are presented with a description of palliative care; categories of candidates; planning and education needed to begin palliative care services; relationships between community and tertiary centers; components of optimally supported neonatal death; family care, including cultural, spiritual, and practical needs; ventilator withdrawal, including pain and symptom management; recommendations when death does not occur after cessation of lifeextending interventions; family follow-up care; and necessary ongoing staff support.

Publisher

Springer Publishing Company

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Critical Care Nursing,General Medicine,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health

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1. Exploring Parent Experiences With Early Palliative Care Practices in the NICU;Advances in Neonatal Care;2024-03-28

2. Support for the Right to Life among Neonatal Intensive Care Nurses in Korea;Asian Bioethics Review;2024-02-24

3. Trauma Informed Care in the Neonatal Intensive Care Unit;Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life & Palliative Care;2023-09-28

4. Christian Humility and the Goods of Perinatal Hospice;Christian bioethics: Non-Ecumenical Studies in Medical Morality;2021-01-21

5. The Neonatal Comfort Care Program: Origin and Growth Over 10 Years;Frontiers in Pediatrics;2020-10-30

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