Abstract
Background:
Previous studies show ambiguous results concerning quality of palliative care among patients with severe mental disorders, defined as schizophrenia, moderate to severe depression, and bipolar disorders.
Aim:
To investigate quality in specialist palliative care among Danish patients with pre-existing severe mental disorders using data from the Danish Palliative Database.
Design:
Danish cohort study linking data from the Danish Palliative Database and hospital medical files.
Setting/participants:
All adult decedents in 2023 from Central Denmark Region affiliated with specialist palliative care. Hospital records were screened for severe mental disorders. Quality indicators included: Place-of-death, days from referral to death, specialist palliative care waiting time, discussion at multidisciplinary conferences and completion of symptom assessment.
Results:
Of 1869 patients, 80 (4.3%) had pre-existing severe mental disorders. Compared to patients without mental disorders, these patients died younger and more often from non-cancer conditions. They were less likely to complete symptom assessment (Risk Ratio (RR): 1.49 (95% CI: 1.15;1.95)). Those who also received active psychiatric treatment experienced longer waiting times for specialist palliative care (Mean ratios (MR): 3.48 (95% CI: 1.06;11.39)) and shorter palliative care pathways (MR: 0.44 (95% CI: 0.20;0.96)) than patients without active psychiatric treatment.
Conclusion:
Danish patients with active severe mental disorders were less likely to complete symptom assessment, had longer waiting times and shorter specialist palliative care pathways. Future efforts should focus on timely access to specialist palliative care and health professionals supporting completion of symptom assessments in this population.
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