Abstract
This prospective audit aimed to evaluate a guideline for the management of nausea and vomiting in palliative care inpatients. Clinical pictures were used to guide diagnosis and treatment, with potentially reversible causes being addressed where appropriate. Over a 3-month period, 40 patient episodes occurred, all of which were included in the audit. The commonest clinical pictures were gastric stasis/outlet obstruction (35%) and chemical/metabolic (30%). Management according to the guideline was effective. Nausea was abolished in 28 of 34 cases (82%) and vomiting resolved completely in 26 of 31 cases (84%). Symptoms were totally controlled in a mean time of 3.4 days.
Nausea and vomiting, although distressing symptoms, can be controlled in the majority of cases. Multi-centre prospective audit, using a standardized tool, may prove useful in allowing larger numbers of patients to be systematically analysed and individual centres to compare outcomes.
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