Guides end-of-life transitions with hospice referral criteria, comfort care protocols, and family communication. Use when transitioning to end-of-life care, initiating hospice, or managing comfort-focused treatment.
Guides end-of-life transitions with hospice referral criteria, comfort care protocols, and family communication.
Approximately 600,000 Americans die of cancer annually, yet end-of-life care quality remains inconsistent. NCI and ASCO define high-quality end-of-life cancer care by specific metrics: hospice enrollment ≥3 days before death, no chemotherapy within 14 days of death, no ICU admission within 30 days of death, and no more than one ED visit within 30 days of death. Currently, median hospice length of stay for cancer patients is approximately 20 days, with 28% of patients enrolling in the last 3 days of life — too late to benefit from comprehensive hospice services.
CMS hospice benefit requires a physician certification that the patient has a terminal illness with a life expectancy of 6 months or less if the disease follows its normal course. ASCO guidelines recommend that oncologists initiate end-of-life discussions early and refer to hospice when disease-directed therapy is no longer beneficial. Poor end-of-life care coordination results in unnecessary suffering, unwanted aggressive interventions, complicated bereavement for families, and high healthcare costs concentrated in the final weeks of life.
General hospice eligibility criteria (CMS hospice benefit):
Cancer-specific prognostic indicators supporting ≤6 months prognosis:
| Indicator | Significance |
|---|---|
| ECOG PS 3–4 (KPS ≤40) | Strong predictor of ≤6 months survival |
| Progressive disease on ≥2 lines of standard therapy | Limited remaining treatment options |
| Declining serum albumin (<2.5 g/dL) | Marker of cancer cachexia and poor prognosis |
| PPI (Palliative Prognostic Index) score >6 | 30-day median survival |
| PaP (Palliative Prognostic Score) Group C | <30-day median survival |
| Clinical impression of "surprised" if patient alive in 6 months | Validated "surprise question" |
| Recurrent hospitalizations (≥2 in 3 months) for cancer complications | Trajectory decline |
| Weight loss >10% in 6 months | Cancer cachexia |
Hospice does NOT require:
SPIKES protocol for serious illness conversation:
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| Setting | Private room, sit down, ensure key family present, turn off pager/phone |
| Perception | "What is your understanding of your illness and where things stand?" |
| Invitation | "How much information would you like about what to expect?" |
| Knowledge | Share prognosis honestly: "I wish the news were different, but..." |
| Emotions | Respond to emotion with empathy: "I can see this is very difficult" |
| Strategy/Summary | "Based on what matters most to you, I recommend..." |
Key questions to address in goals-of-care discussion:
Document who was present, what was discussed, what the patient's stated wishes are, and what decisions were made.
Discontinue non-beneficial interventions:
Comfort care medication management:
| Symptom | First-Line Comfort Measures |
|---|---|
| Pain | Opioids titrated to comfort; consider around-the-clock dosing with PRN breakthrough |
| Dyspnea | Low-dose morphine (2–5mg PO/SL q2–4h); supplemental O2 for comfort (not mandatory if patient is comfortable); fan/open window |
| Anxiety/agitation | Lorazepam 0.5–2mg PO/SL/IV q4–6h; consider midazolam for refractory agitation |
| Nausea | Haloperidol 0.5–2mg PO/IV q6–8h; ondansetron 4–8mg; scopolamine patch |
| Secretions ("death rattle") | Glycopyrrolate 0.2mg SC/IV q4h or scopolamine patch — effective prophylactically but not for established secretions |
| Terminal restlessness | Haloperidol + lorazepam; consider palliative sedation for refractory symptoms (ethical consultation recommended) |
| Constipation | Continue bowel regimen with opioids until oral intake ceases |
| Dehydration | Mouth care and ice chips preferred; IV fluids generally not recommended in actively dying patients (may worsen edema and secretions) |
Family support responsibilities:
Hospice transition coordination:
Complete documentation includes:
分析心理健康数据、识别心理模式、评估心理健康状况、提供个性化心理健康建议。支持与睡眠、运动、营养等其他健康数据的关联分析。