Ethics Consult: Using Hospice as "Treatment" for Behavioral Problems of Dementia

Luisa Skoble,Jonathan Crane

The American Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry(2024)

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摘要
Patients with Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia (BPSD) are among the most challenging patients to treat; these behaviors are estimated to occur in up to 90% of patients with dementia (Aigbogun 2019); of these, one in 5 patients displays aggression (Eastley 1997). The usual treatments have only modest efficacy at best and at times are ineffective in some individuals. Some behaviors such as physical aggression make it difficult, if not impossible, to find placement for these patients. Placement in nursing homes on a hospice status have traditionally required evidence of a 6 month life expectancy; placement in an inpatient hospice setting is usually reserved for patients with even shorter life expectancies such as 2 weeks. Prognosticating life expectancy in patients with dementia is challenging and often inaccurate (Jayes 2004). Furthermore the use of terminal palliative sedation is supposed to be confined to the last 2 weeks of life and/or extreme physical suffering (Schuman-Oliver 2008, AMA Opinion 2013).
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