Palliative Sedation Therapy: A Case Report

Author:

Willard Emily G.1,Wiencek Clareen2

Affiliation:

1. Emily G. Willard is a staff nurse and education coordinator in the medical-respiratory intensive care unit, VCU Health, in Richmond, Virginia. She is a graduate student at the University of Virginia School of Nursing, Charlottesville, Virginia.

2. Clareen Wiencek is a palliative care nurse practitioner and a professor of nursing at the University of Virginia.

Abstract

Introduction Despite repeated exposure to dying patients, critical care providers and nurses may not be familiar with palliative sedation. This case report describes a scenario in which palliative sedation therapy was considered for a patient dying in the intensive care unit. Clinical Findings A 72-year-old woman was transferred from an outside hospital for management of severe acute respiratory distress syndrome. After her transfer, she experienced cardiac arrest and was resuscitated. Diagnosis The patient was diagnosed with pneumonia related to COVID-19. Arterial blood gas values showed her ratio of partial pressure of oxygen to fraction of inspired oxygen to be less than 200, consistent with acute respiratory distress syndrome. Interventions The patient was intubated and started on a ventilator protocol for acute respiratory distress syndrome. After her cardiac arrest, she required a continuous epinephrine infusion. Outcomes The patient’s family was notified of the severity of her clinical status, and the critical care team began to plan the transition from aggressive to comfort care. A provider suggested that the patient should receive continuous intravenous propofol after extubation to manage dyspnea during the dying process. Conclusion Palliative sedation therapy may be needed for dying patients, such as those with severe acute respiratory distress syndrome. The transition from curative to palliative measures often occurs in intensive care units but the ethical principles behind palliative sedation are not well understood by those providing care in these settings. It is vital that critical care nurses and providers be informed about available treatments for symptoms of dying patients, including palliative sedation.

Publisher

AACN Publishing

Subject

Critical Care Nursing,General Medicine

Reference22 articles.

1. Is care for the dying improving in the United States?;Teno;J Palliat Med,2015

2. Hospice & Palliative Nurses Association . HPNA position statement: palliative sedation (under review). Published January 2016. Accessed June 27, 2022. https://advancingexpertcare.org/position-statements

3. National Hospice & Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO) position statement and commentary on the use of palliative sedation in immediately dying terminally ill patients;Kirk;J Pain Symptom Manage,2010

4. Palliative sedation for the relief of refractory physical symptoms;Cherny;Prog Palliat Care,2008

5. Sedation for refractory symptoms;Banerjee,2019

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