Room to Improve: An Audit of In-Hospital End-of-Life Care for Oncology Patients in a Tertiary Cancer Centre in Ireland During the COVID-19 Pandemic

  • Hailey K. Carroll
  • , Aoife Broderick
  • , Orfhlaith McCarthy
  • , Richard M. Bambury
  • , Derek G. Power
  • , Dearbhaile C. Collins
  • , Roisin M. Connolly
  • , Sinead A. Noonan
  • , Dan Collins
  • , Elaine Cunningham
  • , Mary Kennedy
  • , Kieron O'Driscoll
  • , Daniel Nuzum
  • , Katie Twomey
  • , Aideen O'Riordan
  • , Finola O'Sullivan
  • , Claire Roe
  • , Aoife C. Lowney
  • , Mary Jane O'Leary
  • , Seamus O'Reilly

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

The COVID-19 pandemic compounded isolation for patients through social distancing measures and staff shortages. We were concerned about the impact of COVID-19 on the quality of care provided at end-of-life in 2021 in a national cancer centre, and instigated the first ever review of the care of the dying. Quality of care was assessed retrospectively using a validated instrument developed by the United Kingdom’s National Quality Board. Sixty-six patient deaths occurred in our cancer centre in 2021. The ‘risk of dying’ was documented in 65.2% of records. Palliative care services were involved in 77%, and pastoral care in 10.6%. What was important to the patient was documented in 24.2%. The ‘quality-of-death’ score was satisfactory for most but poor in 21.2%. Our study prompted change, including appointment of an end-of-life coordinator, development of a checklist to ensure comprehensive communication, expansion of the end-of-life committee to include junior doctors, and regular audit.

Original languageEnglish
JournalOmega: Journal of Death and Dying
DOIs
Publication statusAccepted/In press - 2023

Keywords

  • attitudes death
  • audit
  • communication
  • COVID-19
  • end of life care
  • family
  • guideline
  • palliative care
  • quality improvement
  • quality of death

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