PEDIATRICS Vol. 108 No. 3 September 2001, pp. 653-660
End-of-Life Care for Neonates and Infants: The Experience and Effects of a Palliative Care Consultation Service
Received Oct 16, 2000; accepted Jan 19, 2001.
, and
From the * Division of Neonatology, Department of Pediatrics,
Medical College of Wisconsin, Children's Hospital of Wisconsin; and
Objective. Neonates and infants have
the highest death rate in the pediatric population, yet there is a
paucity of data about their end-of-life care and whether a palliative
care service can have an impact on that care. The objective of this
study was to describe end-of-life care for infants, including analysis
of palliative care consultations conducted in this population. We
hypothesized that the palliative care consultations performed had an
impact on the infants' end-of-life care.
Design. A retrospective chart review using the "End of
Life Chart Review" from the Center to Improve Care for the Dying was
conducted. The participants were the patients at Children's Hospital
of Wisconsin who died at <1 year of age during the 4-year period
between January 1, 1994, and December 31, 1997. The patients' place of
death, medical interventions performed, and emotionally supportive
services provided to families were analyzed.
Results. Among the 196 deaths during the study period, 25 (13%) of these infants and families had palliative care consultations.
The rate of consultations increased from 5% of the infant deaths in 1994 to 38% of the infant deaths in 1997. Infants of families that
received consultations had fewer days in intensive care units, blood
draws, central lines, feeding tubes, vasopressor and paralytic drug
use, mechanical ventilation, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, and x-rays,
and the families had more frequent referrals for chaplains and social
services than families that did not have palliative care consultations.
Conclusions. This study describes the end-of-life care
that infants and their families received. Fewer medical procedures were
performed, and more supportive services were provided to infants and
families that had a palliative care consultation. This suggests that
palliative care consultation may enhance end-of-life care for newborns.
Department of Obstetrics and Gynecology, Milwaukee Clinical Campus,
University of Wisconsin Medical School, Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
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