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Death and Dying

Editor: Christopher V. Maani Updated: 11/29/2022 10:27:48 AM

Introduction

Death is a part of natural life; however, society is notorious for being uncomfortable with death and dying as a topic on the whole. Many caregivers experience a level of burden from their duties during end-of-life care. This burden is multi-faceted and may include performing medical tasks, communicating with providers, decision-making, and possibly anticipating the grief of impending loss. Similarly, many healthcare providers across the spectrum of care feel unprepared to provide end-of-life care or communicate with patients and families about the complex topics related to death and dying. They can attribute this to the fact that these topics were not discussed or only briefly talked about during formal education.[1] Patients and families must have access to the care and support they require when entering a terminal phase of life. This phase is different for each patient, and the needs may differ for each patient and family. Still, healthcare providers need to provide care and support in a way that respects the patient's dignity and autonomous wishes.

Etiology

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Etiology

According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) from 2016 in the United States of America, deaths for the leading causes are as follows:

  • Heart disease: 635,260
  • Cancer: 598,038
  • Accidents (unintentional injuries): 161,374
  • Chronic lower respiratory diseases: 154,596
  • Stroke (cerebrovascular diseases): 142,142
  • Alzheimers disease: 116,103
  • Diabetes: 80,058
  • Influenza and Pneumonia: 51,537
  • Nephritis, nephrotic syndrome, and nephrosis: 50,046
  • Intentional self-harm (suicide): 44,965

Epidemiology

The CDC collects and reports data about deaths in the United States of America annually. By assessing this information, trends can be identified and addressed. This information and its trends can also be used to develop new research, process improvement, and community programs.

  • Number of deaths: 2,744,248
  • Death rate: 849.3 deaths per 100,000 population
  • Life expectancy: 78.6 years
  • Infant mortality rate: 5.87 deaths per 1,000 live births

All causes of death by age in 2016:

  • Younger than 1 year: 23,161: Congenital malformations, deformations, and chromosomal abnormalities are the leading causes
  • 1 to 4 years: 4045: Unintentional injuries is the leading cause
  • 5 to 14 years: 5503: Unintentional injuries is the leading cause
  • 15 to 24 years: 32,575: Unintentional injuries is the leading cause
  • 25 to 44 years: 135,408: Unintentional injuries is the leading cause
  • 45 to 64 years: 539,961: Malignant neoplasms are the leading causes
  • 65 years and over: 2,003,458: Diseases of the heart are the leading causes

The age-adjusted death rate for all ages, by gender per 100,000 population in 2016:

  • Male: 861.0
  • Female: 617.5

Pathophysiology

The vast majority of patients who experience a natural death, meaning no medical, life-saving interventions to counter the process, follow a stereotypical pattern of signs and symptoms in the time leading up to death. This time frame is often referred to as "actively dying" or "imminent death." It is important for healthcare providers to be familiar with this process, not only so they know what to expect when providing direct care to patients during this time but also so they can guide the family in understanding what to expect and providing support as needed.

  • Early stage: Loss of mobility and becoming bed-bound; loss of interest or ability to drink and eat; cognitive changes to include increased time sleeping or experiencing delirium. Delirium can be a hyperactive or agitated state or a hypoactive state. The trademark point of delirium is there is an acute change in the level of arousal.[2]
  • Middle stage: Further decline in mental status to becoming obtunded or slow arousal with stimulation and only brief periods of wakefulness. Patients often exhibit the "death rattle" which a noisy breathing pattern caused by a pooling of oral secretions due to the loss of the swallowing reflex.
  • Late stage: Coma; fever, possibly due to aspiration pneumonia; an altered respiratory pattern, which can be periods of apnea alternated with hyperpnea or irregular breathing; and mottled extremities due to the constriction of the peripheral circulation 

The timeline for each patient is variable. A patient may experience these signs and symptoms over 24 hours or longer than 14 days.[3]

History and Physical

Death is the end state of every disease process; however, each disease has a different progression and course. It is important to assess the patient for findings related to their underlying disease process and their needs related to the death and dying process.

The self-determination of the patient with capacity must be respected. When patients can make their own choices, their autonomy must be upheld. It is not the role of the provider to impart their values and beliefs to patients. Patients' families may experience anticipatory grief and have a hard time fully handling the current situation. They may want to push their personal choices for the situation instead of respecting their loved one's wishes and choices. As healthcare providers leading family discussions related to these difficult topics, remember always to keep the patient's goals at the forefront.

This type of discussion may arise because of the following reasons (but is not limited to):

  • Patients who, according to clinical assessment, have entered the dying process
  • Patients no longer wish to receive life-sustaining treatment in the event of a cardiac arrest, also known as implementing a Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) order
  • Patients diagnosed with a progressive disease process that ultimately causes their death; examples include cardiac disease, kidney disease, cancers
  • Patients who have been previously diagnosed with progressive diseases have a new decline in their status
  • Patients who wish to stop curative treatments
  • Patients who request to discuss these matters

When gathering information about a patient and a situation, it is important to create a calm environment and allow the patient and their family to feel comfortable. Give them enough time to answer questions. Ensure that each party's goals have been discussed: the patient's, the family's, and the medical team's.[4][5]

Evaluation

The evaluation necessary depends on the individual patient and where they are in their process. It may be appropriate to gather a wide range of laboratory data, radiographic tests, and other diagnostic studies for the patient. It may also be appropriate not to order anything for a patient if that aligns with their goals for quality of life.[6]

Treatment / Management

The primary goal in treatment for patients is alleviating suffering. Hospice care and palliative care are often confused. Hospice care is the term given to the care provided when a patient is given a prognosis of death within 6 months, and they do not pursue curative treatments. They focus on improving the quality of life, which can mean many things. Palliative care can be incorporated into the plan of care at any time for any patient who is experiencing suffering and wants to ease that suffering without directly treating the cause of that suffering. Someone may use palliative care in addition to curative treatments. Suffering may have many forms, and the care provided should be multi-disciplinary. Some areas that may be addressed are spiritual with chaplain services; caregiver fatigue with community resources or a social worker; physical symptoms such as pain, nausea, and constipation with a multimodal approach; and even a palliative care team leader to coordinate all the moving pieces and keep the family and patient aware of what is happening. It is important to establish a treatment goal with the patient and family and understand that this goal may evolve.[5]

Differential Diagnosis

It is important to identify how to know death has occurred and to educate the family of a patient who may be actively dying. This is especially important if the patient is choosing to die at home. 

  • No breathing
  • No heartbeat
  • No response to verbal or tactile stimuli
  • Loss of bowels or bladder
  • Eyelids slightly open; eyes fixed on a certain spot; no pupil activity
  • Jaw relaxed and mouth slightly open[7]

Pertinent Studies and Ongoing Trials

A developing topic in palliative and hospice care is that of assisted death. A handful of countries have legalized the practice, which includes the patient filling a prescription from a provider for a lethal dose of medication after the appropriate screening. In the United States of America, California, Montana, Oregon, Vermont, and Washington have laws that allow terminally ill patients to choose assisted death if appropriately screened.[8]

Prognosis

Most people die in the hospital; however, most Americans report they would not wish to die in the hospital if they could choose. Days spent at home is an important patient-centered outcome. When reviewing data on community-living older people, days spent at home in the last 6 months did not differ by age, sex, or race/ethnicity. Still, they were significantly lower for patients suffering from organ failure and highest for sudden death and cancer.[9]

Complications

Talking about death and dying is an important element in the treatment and care of patients and families. The healthcare provider needs to be comfortable engaging with this type of discussion during the terminal phase and in the early stages of a grave prognosis or when broached by a patient. It is crucial, as a healthcare provider, to self-reflect on one's emotional thoughts and feelings regarding death and dying, in general, and how the topics relate to each patient. It is normal to have strong feelings. Identify those feelings. Talk with a colleague or keep a personal journal. It is helpful to role-play difficult discussions and reflect on the emotions before having them. Addressing those emotions before encountering the patients and their families allows the healthcare provider to be fully present for that patient and their needs. 

As mentioned before, the primary cause of death for ages 1 through 44 years in the United States of America is unintentional injuries. This causes a complicated grief situation for the family due to the swiftness and unexpectedness of the situation. Ensure to provide resources and be prepared to repeat information as the family may experience the first stage of grief and denial and not retain what was discussed in your meeting. If the second stage of grief, anger, is present, practitioners should not take anger directed toward them. The family has a unique grief experience. Provide support as they need it.

Conflicts may arise when a patient's wishes do not match a family member's wishes, or a patient wants to continue treatments that the medical team deems futile. In such situations, it is advisable to hold several discussions to ensure that all parties have the same information and understanding. An ethics committee may need to become involved if a resolution cannot be reached.[5][10][11]

Consultations

After discussing with patients and families and identifying their needs, it may be appropriate to consult the palliative care team, chaplain or spiritual services, social worker, pain management team, dietician, occupational therapist, physical therapist, community resources, or mental health professionals.

Deterrence and Patient Education

Continuity is important. Discussions should take place often and should not contain too much information. It is important to ensure that each party understands the information delivered in each session. A good technique is to Ask/Tell/Teach/Ask. Ask the patient or family member what they understand about the topic to be discussed to have a baseline for their knowledge. Then you can Tell them the new information or Teach them the new skill. Finally, Ask them to repeat what you told or taught them in their own words.

Pearls and Other Issues

Generally accepted actions for care in the dying patient:

  • Withholding or withdrawal of life-sustaining measures: Not intubating a patient, not providing fluids or nutrition, removing mechanical ventilation, or turning off a pacemaker.
  • Relief of pain and other symptoms, Such as dyspnea, anxiety, agitation, and confusion; concern that the use of drugs that treat those symptoms could shorten the patient's life must not lead to underdosing.
  • Sedation: In a few cases, complex symptoms may be so severe that they are refractory to all medications, and the undertreatment of those symptoms causes distress. They may perform continuous sedation until death in these types of situations. Discussions should be open and honest and involve all pertinent parties. The depth of sedation should be symptom-guided.[5]

Enhancing Healthcare Team Outcomes

Standardizing clinical education on how to discuss death and dying among healthcare providers opens the conversation for patients and their families to palliative care and how to best care for their loved ones. Palliative care is underused, which may be due to the stigma related to giving up fighting one's illness or the stigma related to death in our culture. When healthcare providers are more comfortable with this topic, patients and their families are the beneficiaries. The interprofessional team can provide higher-quality holistic care.[12]

References


[1]

Kerr AM, Biechler M, Kachmar U, Palocko B, Shaub T. Confessions of a Reluctant Caregiver Palliative Educational Program: Using Readers' Theater to Teach End-of-Life Communication in Undergraduate Medical Education. Health communication. 2020 Feb:35(2):192-200. doi: 10.1080/10410236.2018.1550471. Epub 2018 Nov 27     [PubMed PMID: 30477344]


[2]

Hui D, Frisbee-Hume S, Wilson A, Dibaj SS, Nguyen T, De La Cruz M, Walker P, Zhukovsky DS, Delgado-Guay M, Vidal M, Epner D, Reddy A, Tanco K, Williams J, Hall S, Liu D, Hess K, Amin S, Breitbart W, Bruera E. Effect of Lorazepam With Haloperidol vs Haloperidol Alone on Agitated Delirium in Patients With Advanced Cancer Receiving Palliative Care: A Randomized Clinical Trial. JAMA. 2017 Sep 19:318(11):1047-1056. doi: 10.1001/jama.2017.11468. Epub     [PubMed PMID: 28975307]

Level 1 (high-level) evidence

[3]

Durepos P, Sussman T, Ploeg J, Akhtar-Danesh N, Punia H, Kaasalainen S. What Does Death Preparedness Mean for Family Caregivers of Persons With Dementia? The American journal of hospice & palliative care. 2019 May:36(5):436-446. doi: 10.1177/1049909118814240. Epub 2018 Dec 5     [PubMed PMID: 30518228]


[4]

Stubbs JM,Assareh H,Achat HM,Jalaludin B, Inpatient palliative care of people dying in New South Wales hospitals or soon after discharge. Internal medicine journal. 2019 Feb     [PubMed PMID: 30091196]


[5]

Swiss Academy Of Medical Sciences. Medical-ethical guidelines: Management of dying and death. Swiss medical weekly. 2018 Nov 19:148():w14664. doi: 10.4414/smw.2018.14664. Epub 2018 Nov 30     [PubMed PMID: 30499582]


[6]

Carr D, Luth EA. Advance Care Planning: Contemporary Issues and Future Directions. Innovation in aging. 2017 Mar 1:1(1):igx012. doi: 10.1093/geroni/igx012. Epub 2017 Aug 28     [PubMed PMID: 30480109]

Level 3 (low-level) evidence

[7]

Ortega-Galán ÁM, Ruiz-Fernández MD, Carmona-Rega MI, Cabrera-Troya J, Ortíz-Amo R, Ibáñez-Masero O. Competence and Compassion: Key Elements of Professional Care at the End of Life From Caregiver's Perspective. The American journal of hospice & palliative care. 2019 Jun:36(6):485-491. doi: 10.1177/1049909118816662. Epub 2018 Dec 5     [PubMed PMID: 30518225]

Level 3 (low-level) evidence

[8]

O'Connor MM,Hunt RW,Gardner J,Draper M,Maddocks I,Malowney T,Owler BK, Documenting the process of developing the Victorian voluntary assisted dying legislation. Australian health review : a publication of the Australian Hospital Association. 2018 Nov 30     [PubMed PMID: 30496035]


[9]

Gill TM, Gahbauer EA, Leo-Summers L, Murphy TE, Han L. Days Spent at Home in the Last Six Months of Life Among Community-Living Older Persons. The American journal of medicine. 2019 Feb:132(2):234-239. doi: 10.1016/j.amjmed.2018.10.029. Epub 2018 Nov 14     [PubMed PMID: 30447203]


[10]

Morris S, Fletcher K, Goldstein R. The Grief of Parents After the Death of a Young Child. Journal of clinical psychology in medical settings. 2019 Sep:26(3):321-338. doi: 10.1007/s10880-018-9590-7. Epub     [PubMed PMID: 30488260]


[11]

Dillon BR, Healy MA, Lee CW, Reichstein AC, Silveira MJ, Morris AM, Suwanabol PA. Surgeon Perspectives Regarding Death and Dying. Journal of palliative medicine. 2019 Feb:22(2):132-137. doi: 10.1089/jpm.2018.0197. Epub 2018 Nov 17     [PubMed PMID: 30457430]

Level 3 (low-level) evidence

[12]

Shen MJ,Wellman JD, Evidence of palliative care stigma: The role of negative stereotypes in preventing willingness to use palliative care. Palliative     [PubMed PMID: 30520405]