End of Life in Neonatology: Palliative Care Integration

Authors

  • Célia Soares Serviço de Neonatologia. Departamento de Pediatria. Centro Hospitalar de São João/Faculdade de Medicina do Porto. Porto. Portugal.
  • Manuela Rodrigues Serviço de Neonatologia. Departamento de Pediatria. Centro Hospitalar de São João/Faculdade de Medicina do Porto. Porto. Portugal.
  • Gustavo Rocha Serviço de Neonatologia. Departamento de Pediatria. Centro Hospitalar de São João/Faculdade de Medicina do Porto. Porto. Portugal.
  • Angelina Martins Serviço de Neonatologia. Departamento de Pediatria. Centro Hospitalar de São João/Faculdade de Medicina do Porto. Porto. Portugal.
  • Hercília Guimarães Serviço de Neonatologia. Departamento de Pediatria. Centro Hospitalar de São João/Faculdade de Medicina do Porto. Porto. Portugal.

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.20344/amp.2100

Abstract

Background: Today the limitation of therapeutic effort and the neonatal palliative care are extremely important and had been increasingly done by several countries. Nevertheless, in Portugal, studies and guidelines regarding end of life attitudes are still a shortage.
Material and Methods: We analyzed 49 files in a retrospective review of neonatal deaths between 2010 and 2012; the results were compared with those from a previous study made in the same NICU that included the neonatal deaths of 1992-1995 and 2002-2005.
Results: The results show that congenital anomalies were the cause of death for 57.1% newborns, extreme prematurity for 18.4% and 16.3% died with infection. Regarding to the mode of death, 57.1% of newborns died after cardiopulmonary resuscitation failure, 20.4% after withholding treatment and 22.4% of deaths followed therapy withdrawal. Differences were found between the three groups classified according to the ‘mode of death’, length of stay and parental presence during death. Therapeutic limitation practices and palliative
care were reported in 28.6% of the files and a Do-Not-Resuscitate Order was included in 16.3%. The former two increased during the three periods analyzed. The use of a neonatal pain scale, opioids and sedatives administration, parental presence during death, clinical meetings with neonatologists, interdisciplinary meetings and psychological support for parents also increased.
Conclusion: This study shows a trend towards an increase in therapeutic limitation practices and palliative care in this NICU in the last three decades. However, there is still a lot to do regarding the clinical research, medical education and ethical discussion.

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Author Biographies

Célia Soares, Serviço de Neonatologia. Departamento de Pediatria. Centro Hospitalar de São João/Faculdade de Medicina do Porto. Porto. Portugal.

Manuela Rodrigues, Serviço de Neonatologia. Departamento de Pediatria. Centro Hospitalar de São João/Faculdade de Medicina do Porto. Porto. Portugal.

Gustavo Rocha, Serviço de Neonatologia. Departamento de Pediatria. Centro Hospitalar de São João/Faculdade de Medicina do Porto. Porto. Portugal.

Angelina Martins, Serviço de Neonatologia. Departamento de Pediatria. Centro Hospitalar de São João/Faculdade de Medicina do Porto. Porto. Portugal.

Hercília Guimarães, Serviço de Neonatologia. Departamento de Pediatria. Centro Hospitalar de São João/Faculdade de Medicina do Porto. Porto. Portugal.

Published

2013-08-30

How to Cite

1.
Soares C, Rodrigues M, Rocha G, Martins A, Guimarães H. End of Life in Neonatology: Palliative Care Integration. Acta Med Port [Internet]. 2013 Aug. 30 [cited 2024 Nov. 24];26(4):318-26. Available from: https://actamedicaportuguesa.com/revista/index.php/amp/article/view/2100