08/08/2019
Impact Of A&E Visits On Cancer Patients Highlighted
Cancer patients with at least one emergency admission in 2015 were twice as likely to die in hospital, a report studying those in their last year of life has found.
The impact of A&E admissions on the outcomes of the 4,316 people who died in 2015 was examined by the NI Cancer Registry at Queen's University Belfast and Macmillan Cancer Support, with concerns arising regarding the frequency of admission, late diagnosis, care planning and preferred place of death.
Almost three in every four people who died from cancer in Northern Ireland in 2015 visited an emergency department in the last year of their life. Just over half of these occurred outside normal working hours, when care from other services such as the NI Acute Oncology Service was not available.
The findings reveal high use of emergency admissions in the last year of life with one in six people having three or more visits. The issue of late diagnosis remains prevalent, with one in nine people (11%) admitted on the same day as their cancer diagnosis and another quarter (23%) admitted one to three months before their cancer diagnosis.
With the right support, cancer patients would prefer to die at home. Unfortunately, the study found that people with at least one emergency admission were twice as likely to die in hospital (48% vs 24%). One in six people died within seven days of their last emergency admission and of these, almost all died in hospital.
Six key recommendations to improve person-centred care for cancer patients in their last year of life have emerged from the report:
• Continuing to promote early detection of cancer
• Early identification of patients who are in their last year of life
• Additional training for healthcare professionals to improve communication and advance care planning
• Establishing a direct point of contact for patients and their carers
• Piloting extended hours for the NI Acute Oncology Service
• Further development of community-based services.
Dr Anna Gavin, Director of the NI Cancer Registry at Queen's University Belfast hopes that the findings and recommendations of the report will inform decision-making, increase collaboration and improve service delivery across NI.
Dr Gavin said: "Our findings show that the burden of emergency admissions for cancer patients in the last year of life is high. This has huge implications for the patient, their family and carers and the wider health and social care system. The six recommendations we have made could reduce the number of emergency admissions for cancer patients in the last year of life."
Heather Monteverde, Head of Services for Macmillan in NI says that we all need and deserve quality end-of-life care: "This report finds that in far too many cases, people's individual needs are not being met. The fact that so many people are receiving a devastating cancer diagnosis after an emergency admission demonstrates that much more needs to be done to ensure a whole system approach to enabling person-centred care which integrates primary, secondary and community care resources.
"It's also important that health care services are universally strong at identifying people who are approaching the last year of their life. Better communication between patients and professionals about end-of-life choices is essential. All health care professionals should be supported so they can confidently have conversations with people about death and enable shared decision-making and advance care planning."
(JG/CM)
The impact of A&E admissions on the outcomes of the 4,316 people who died in 2015 was examined by the NI Cancer Registry at Queen's University Belfast and Macmillan Cancer Support, with concerns arising regarding the frequency of admission, late diagnosis, care planning and preferred place of death.
Almost three in every four people who died from cancer in Northern Ireland in 2015 visited an emergency department in the last year of their life. Just over half of these occurred outside normal working hours, when care from other services such as the NI Acute Oncology Service was not available.
The findings reveal high use of emergency admissions in the last year of life with one in six people having three or more visits. The issue of late diagnosis remains prevalent, with one in nine people (11%) admitted on the same day as their cancer diagnosis and another quarter (23%) admitted one to three months before their cancer diagnosis.
With the right support, cancer patients would prefer to die at home. Unfortunately, the study found that people with at least one emergency admission were twice as likely to die in hospital (48% vs 24%). One in six people died within seven days of their last emergency admission and of these, almost all died in hospital.
Six key recommendations to improve person-centred care for cancer patients in their last year of life have emerged from the report:
• Continuing to promote early detection of cancer
• Early identification of patients who are in their last year of life
• Additional training for healthcare professionals to improve communication and advance care planning
• Establishing a direct point of contact for patients and their carers
• Piloting extended hours for the NI Acute Oncology Service
• Further development of community-based services.
Dr Anna Gavin, Director of the NI Cancer Registry at Queen's University Belfast hopes that the findings and recommendations of the report will inform decision-making, increase collaboration and improve service delivery across NI.
Dr Gavin said: "Our findings show that the burden of emergency admissions for cancer patients in the last year of life is high. This has huge implications for the patient, their family and carers and the wider health and social care system. The six recommendations we have made could reduce the number of emergency admissions for cancer patients in the last year of life."
Heather Monteverde, Head of Services for Macmillan in NI says that we all need and deserve quality end-of-life care: "This report finds that in far too many cases, people's individual needs are not being met. The fact that so many people are receiving a devastating cancer diagnosis after an emergency admission demonstrates that much more needs to be done to ensure a whole system approach to enabling person-centred care which integrates primary, secondary and community care resources.
"It's also important that health care services are universally strong at identifying people who are approaching the last year of their life. Better communication between patients and professionals about end-of-life choices is essential. All health care professionals should be supported so they can confidently have conversations with people about death and enable shared decision-making and advance care planning."
(JG/CM)
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