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Journal Article

Citation

Worrall AP, Doyle CP, Ní Dhomhnall R, Lorton C, Barrett M, Uí Dhuibhir P, O'Higgins C, Brady B, Walsh D. Ir. Med. J. 2022; 115(5): e596.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2022, Winstone Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

35696231

Abstract

Aim Orthostatic Hypotension (OH) is an indicator of deteriorating autonomic dysfunction. Adherence to BP and OH measurement guidelines in an inpatient specialist palliative care unit (SPCU) was unknown. Compliance of BP and OH measurement in an advanced cancer cohort was audited.

METHODS A retrospective analysis of four consecutive months of patients admitted with an advanced cancer diagnosis to the inpatient SPCU was conducted. Data was obtained from 168 clinical records, and audited against current institutional clinical standards.

RESULTS Falls risk screening including BP and OH measurements were not measured on admission in 19% (n=32) cases as recommended by institutional guidelines. Where falls risks were identified in 94 (69%) patients only 71 (76%) of these had completed risk assessments. OH testing was incomplete or not conducted in 59% (n=42) of risk assessments. This had patient care and safety implications e.g. under-reporting falls risk. In addition, institutional guidelines were inflexible in clinical practice specific to a palliative care cohort of patient.

CONCLUSIONS Institutional guidelines need regular reviewing. In cases where a healthcare professional determines it is inappropriate to perform an assessment, we recommend a modification to the tools allowing for recording of this decision. OH is an underestimated reality in hospice populations and the impact on hospice services is worthy of further study.


Language: en

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