reviewJAMANov 22, 2016Closed access

Association Between Palliative Care and Patient and Caregiver Outcomes

University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill · University of Pittsburgh · +4 more institutions

PubMed
Indexed incrossrefpubmed

Abstract

Importance

The use of palliative care programs and the number of trials assessing their effectiveness have increased.

Objective

To determine the association of palliative care with quality of life (QOL), symptom burden, survival, and other outcomes for people with life-limiting illness and for their caregivers. Data Sources: MEDLINE, EMBASE, CINAHL, and Cochrane CENTRAL to July 2016. Study Selection: Randomized clinical trials of palliative care interventions in adults with life-limiting illness. Data Extraction and Synthesis: Two reviewers independently extracted data. Narrative synthesis was conducted for all trials. Quality of life, symptom burden, and survival were analyzed using random-effects meta-analysis, with estimates of QOL translated to units of the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-palliative care scale (FACIT-Pal) instrument (range, 0-184 [worst-best]; minimal clinically important difference [MCID], 9 points); and symptom burden translated to the Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale (ESAS) (range, 0-90 [best-worst]; MCID, 5.7 points). Main Outcomes and Measures: Quality of life, symptom burden, survival, mood, advance care planning, site of death, health care satisfaction, resource utilization, and health care expenditures.

Citation impact

1,083
total citations
FWCI
81.74
Percentile
100%
References
76
Citations per year

Authors

14

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Minimal clinically important difference
  • Palliative care
  • Quality of life (healthcare)
  • MEDLINE
  • CINAHL
  • Advance care planning
  • Randomized controlled trial
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