Beyond hospice: the burden of palliative care needs in hospitals and long-term care facilities. A nationwide multicenter study
摘要
Palliative care is traditionally associated with hospice and cancer care, yet older adults admitted to hospitals and long-term care facilities (LTCF) frequently experience multimorbidity, frailty, and high symptom burden. We aimed to estimate the prevalence and characteristics of palliative care needs in Internal Medicine and Geriatrics hospital wards and LTCF in Italy.
MethodsWe conducted a national cross-sectional point-prevalence study. Adults aged ≥ 18 years hospitalized in participating wards or residing in LTCF were eligible. NECPAL 4.0 tool was used to identify patients and residents with palliative care needs. Additional indicators included functional and nutritional decline, repeated hospitalizations, dysphagia, pressure ulcers, delirium, and pain.
ResultsA total of 5,389 participants were included (3,303 hospital patients, median age 81 years; 2,086 LTCF residents, median age 86 years) from 235 facilities. Overall, 58.3% of hospitalized patients and 48.1% of LTCF residents had a positive NECPAL assessment. Prevalence was higher among patients with cancer (77.2% in hospital; 61.5% in LTCF), but remained substantial among those without cancer (50.8% in hospital; 46.8% in LTCF). Functional decline (56.2% hospital; 48.7% LTCF), nutritional decline (36.6%; 23.9%), dysphagia (17.6%; 28.8%), delirium (19.2%; 36.4%), and moderate-to-severe pain (25.9%; 20.3%) were common across settings.
ConclusionPalliative care needs are highly prevalent among hospitalized patients and LTCF residents and are not limited to oncology. These findings support systematic screening and integration of a needs-based palliative care approach within hospital and long-term care systems.