Hong
Kong Med J 2018 Feb;24(1):63–7 | Epub 4 Aug 2017
DOI: 10.12809/hkmj166807
© Hong Kong Academy of Medicine. CC BY-NC-ND 4.0
REVIEW ARTICLE
End-of-life services for older people in residential
care homes in Hong Kong
James KH Luk, FHKCP, FHKAM (Medicine)
Department of Medicine and Geriatrics, Fung Yiu
King Hospital, Pokfulam, Hong Kong
Corresponding author: Dr James KH Luk (lukkh@ha.org.hk)
Abstract
Good end-of-life care is needed for older people
living in residential care homes with advanced irreversible chronic
medical illnesses and cancers. At present, the usual practice of
residential care homes is to send older residents to acute care hospitals
when they are unwell, and some residents will die in hospital. Dying in
hospital without choice for older people may not be in alignment with the
principle of ‘good death’. There are many barriers for older people to die
in the place of their choice, particularly in a residential care home. In
the community, to enhance end-of-life care for elderly people living in
residential care homes, pilot end-of-life programmes have been organised
by community geriatric assessment teams. In 2015, the Hong Kong Hospital
Authority started the ‘Enhance community geriatric assessment team support
to end-of-life patients in residential care homes for the elderly’
programme in four clusters. In the hospital setting, an end-of-life
clinical plan and end-of-life ward in geriatric step-down hospitals may
improve the quality of death of elderly people. In September 2015, the
Hospital Authority guideline on life-sustaining treatment for terminally
ill people was updated. Among other key end-of-life issues, careful
(comfort) hand feeding was first mentioned in the guideline. The possible
establishment of enduring powers of attorney for health care
decision-making and enhancement of careful (comfort) hand feeding are new
developments in the coming years.
Introduction
The population of Hong Kong is ageing rapidly.1 Approximately 8.5% of those aged 65 years and above
live in a residential care home for the elderly (RCHE) in Hong Kong.2 Older RCHE residents are characterised by multiple
co-morbidities, with many advanced irreversible chronic medical illnesses
(advanced dementia, chronic lung or heart diseases, end-stage renal
failure, and Parkinson’s disease, to name but a few). They may also have
cancers that require palliative rather than curative treatment. Many have
poor mobility, high dependency, and poor cognitive function.3 It is increasingly realised that, similar to cancer
patients, good end-of-life (EOL) care is important in the management of
patients with irreversible chronic illnesses.4
Indeed, high mortality has been reported in RCHE residents with advanced
dementia, with a 1-year mortality rate of 34%.5
As the EOL stage approaches, patients with advanced irreversible chronic
medical illnesses may experience distressing symptoms similar to patients
dying of more commonly recognised terminal conditions.6 7 8 Therefore, it is advocated that EOL care should be
provided for this vulnerable group.9
Previous literature has laid down the concept of a
‘good death’, which includes being able to know when death is approaching;
retaining control of what happens; having dignity, privacy, and pain and
symptom control; having choice and control over where death occurs (at
home or elsewhere), access to information and expertise, access to
spiritual or emotional support, access to hospice care in any location,
and control over who is present; having the ability to issue advance
directives; having time to say goodbye; and leaving when it is time to go
instead of having life prolonged pointlessly.10
Unfortunately, most, if not all, elderly patients living in RCHEs with
advanced irreversible chronic medical illnesses die in public hospitals.11 Acute medical and surgical wards
in public hospitals are intended for acute curative management of ill
patients. They are not generally well-designed for dying with dignity and
privacy. Elderly patients will die in an unfamiliar environment with
restricted visiting hours. Ward staff are busy and most have not been
trained to provide counselling and spiritual care to dying patients and
family members. A single room with privacy for a dying patient is
unavailable in most public hospitals, except in some palliative care
units. The dying experience for RCHE residents with advanced irreversible
chronic medical illnesses is still far from a ‘good death’ in Hong Kong.12
Can we have an alternative in the place of dying?
‘Dying in place’ is one of the elements of a good
death.13 Dying in place usually
means dying at home or in an RCHE, as opposed to a hospital.14 If an elderly person dies at home, there is no need
to inform the Coroner. A registered practitioner can fill in a Medical
Certificate of the Cause of Death (Form 18) of the Births and Deaths
Registration Ordinance (Chapter 174). The form is available from the
offices of the Registrar of Births and Deaths.15
The practitioner must have attended the patient within 14 days immediately
prior to the patient’s death. Using Form 18, the deceased’s family has to
register a death within 24 hours at the Births and Deaths General Register
Office. After death registration, a Certificate of Registration of Death
(Form 12) will be issued. According to Section 16 of the Births and Deaths
Registration Ordinance, no person shall remove a dead body, unless they
have obtained either Form 12 or, in urgent cases, a permit from the
nearest police station.16 The
problems for dying in place in Hong Kong include social taboo, lack of
death education, fear of depreciation of property value if a person died
at home, and inadequate medical support to take care of dying persons at
home.17 18
For an RCHE, the Coroner Ordinance (Section 4,
Coroner Ordinance, CAP 504) demands all deaths in RCHEs (except nursing
homes) be reported to the Coroner.19
Because of the above ordinance, RCHEs are disinclined to allow an older
resident to die in their premises. When they see a patient’s health is
deteriorating, they will call an ambulance to take the patient to the
accident and emergency department (AED). Moreover, RCHE staff are largely
untrained in managing EOL patients. Environmentally, RCHEs are largely
overcrowded, with no extra room for a resident to pass their last moments
in privacy. Geriatric and palliative care specialists available to RCHEs
are also insufficient. The lack of a family practice model whereby doctors
would visit patients at home or the RCHE to provide EOL care is another
obstacle.
New developments in end-of-life care at residential
care homes for the elderly
The wishes of older people in RCHEs has been the
subject of research recently. One study showed that 28.8% of the older
residents wished to die in the RCHE as an alternative to a hospital.20 Another local study showed that 35% of older people
would prefer dying in their RCHEs.21
A pioneer programme in the Haven of Hope Nursing Home has achieved
favourable results, with nearly 30% of all deaths occurring in the nursing
home.22
There have been encouraging developments in EOL
care for older people in RCHEs in the past 10 years. A new model of EOL
care has been implemented in the New Territories East Cluster in Hong Kong
aiming at promoting quality EOL care for RCHE residents, through the
establishment of an advance care plan (ACP) and introduction of a new care
pathway.23 The pathway bypasses
the emergency and acute medical wards by direct clinical admission to an
extended-care facility. A study on this programme shows that nearly 40% of
EOL patients could be managed entirely in an extended-care setting without
compromising the quality of care and survival.23
In September 2009, the Hong Kong West Community
Geriatric Assessment Team (HKW CGAT), which is based at the Tung Wah Group
of Hospitals Fung Yiu King Hospital (FYKH), piloted the EOL programme for
RCHE in cooperation with two care and attention homes.24 The programme aimed at providing EOL care for older
RCHE residents with advanced irreversible chronic medical illnesses and
cancers, ensuring the elderly people were able to have a comfortable and
dignified period in the RCHE before they died. The Gold Standards
Framework for the three illness trajectories was used to identify suitable
candidates to join the EOL programme.25
In the programme, there were weekly EOL clinics and family conferences. An
ACP and Do-Not-Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (DNACPR)
[non-hospitalised] option would be established. If patients were
cognitively intact, an advance directive would also be created based on
the wishes of the older residents. The patients/family members could
select one of the two pathways, specifically the Hospital Pathway and AED
Pathway. In the Hospital Pathway, an elderly person would be clinically
admitted to a geriatric step-down hospital (instead of an acute care
hospital) that was suitable for EOL care via an expedited route. In the
AED Pathway, an elderly person would stay in the RCHE for as long as
possible with support from the RCHE staff and the EOL team of HKW CGAT. At
the last moment (when the patient becomes unconscious, his/her breathing
becomes shallow, and/or blood pressure starts to drop), he/she would be
transferred to the AED by ambulance. Resuscitation would still be carried
out by the ambulance staff, as the Fire Services Ordinance in Hong Kong
stipulates that resuscitation has to be carried out for their patients.
When the patient reaches the AED, resuscitation would not be offered.
Instead, a single room would be offered in the AED, allowing family
members to stay with the dying patient. The AED doctors would help to
certify death when the patient passed away, whereas the death certificate
would be signed by the HKW CGAT doctors who had seen the patient within
the previous 2 weeks.
An audit of the programme was performed to study
the RCHE residents who had joined the piloted EOL programme for RCHE and
passed away in the AED between September 2009 and August 2014.26 Twenty-two patients joined the programme with AED
Pathway during the audit period. Nine (41%) patients finally died in the
AED. When they arrived at the AED, all were not resuscitated according to
the DNACPR (non-hospitalised) order and were allocated a single room for
the family members to say goodbye. In the last 180 days before death, they
had an average (per person) of 2.67 AED attendances (including the death
episode in the AED), 1.67 medical admissions, and 16 medical bed-days.
These figures were lower than those reported by the Hospital Authority in
2012 (2.98 AED attendances, 2.56 medical admissions, 26 medical bed-days)
for local RCHE residents during the last 180 days of life.26 It seems that the AED Pathway was logistically
feasible and potentially could reduce AED and hospital service
utilisation. The programme is also a good model of medico-social
collaboration in taking care of EOL patients.
In October 2015, a programme called ‘Enhance
community geriatric assessment team support to end-of-life patients in
residential care homes for the elderly’ was implemented by the Hospital
Authority in Hong Kong. It was first started in Hong Kong West, Hong Kong
East, New Territories West, and New Territories East clusters in 2015. In
the programme, the CGAT service is enhanced, with a link-nurse as a case
manager for older people in RCHEs approaching the EOL stage. The CGAT also
collaborates with palliative care specialists to implement this programme.
In the Hong Kong West Cluster, the CGAT collaborates with the Palliative
Medical Unit of the Grantham Hospital. The Unit provides training to RCHE
and CGAT staff, holds regular case conferences with the HKW CGAT, and
assists in complex case management. To avoid duplication of service
provision, RCHE patients who have been seen by the palliative care team
are not recruited into the CGAT EOL programme. An ACP will be deliberated
with patients and family members, and documented in a standard ACP form.
Orders of DNACPR (non-hospitalised) are made if agreed by a patient or
family members. An advance directive may also be signed if the patient is
mentally sound and wishes to do so. The RCHE staff bring the ACP, DNACPR
(non-hospitalised) records, and advance directive document (if available)
whenever the older residents attend the AED or are admitted to hospital.
An ACP without an advance directive is not legally binding. The health
care team, if possible, will usually act in accordance with the wishes of
the patients and family members as laid down in the ACP. The final
treatment decision will be based on the assessment and judgement of the
health care team. An advance directive is a legally binding order and has
to be strictly adhered to by the health care team. The plan of the
Hospital Authority is to expand the enhanced CGAT support to EOL patients
in RCHE service to all clusters in the near future.
End-of-life care for older patients in the hospital
setting
In view of the rising number of older patients with
advanced and irreversible chronic medical illnesses dying in hospitals,
FYKH—a geriatric step-down hospital—established the End-of-Life Clinical
Plan for Inpatients (EOL-CPi) in 2012. At the time of writing, the EOL-CPi
has been used for nearly 400 patients. A recently published study shows
that a tailor-made clinical plan could be useful to guide the team in
fostering dignified death in dying patients in a geriatric step-down
hospital.27 Patients and relatives
are satisfied with the programme as a whole. In August 2015, an EOL ward
with eight beds was established in FYKH. A preliminary study of 149
patients who died in the EOL ward shows that it can enhance dignified
death by providing a peaceful environment so that family members are able
to stay with the patient for as long as possible before they die
(unpublished data).
Feeding problems in end-of-life care
Poor feeding or swallowing difficulties may occur
at the end stage of cancers. Similarly, many irreversible chronic diseases
are associated with eating problems at the EOL stage. For instance,
dementia, at the end stage, is commonly associated with feeding problems.
When eating difficulties arise, unless there is a valid advance directive
refusing enteral feeding, tube feeding is often started in Hong Kong. Tube
feeding has shortcomings and complications.28
29 30
As yet, no benefits of survival or nutrition, and aspiration reduction
have been demonstrated. Residents in RCHE with feeding tubes are
frequently transferred to the AED to manage tube complications such as
blockage and dislodgement.31
Different societies throughout the world, including the American
Geriatrics Society and the Australian and New Zealand Society for
Geriatric Medicine, have recommended against the use of tube feeding in
advanced dementia, at least as the only option.32
33 Careful (or comfort) hand
feeding (CHF) should be offered as it is at least as good as tube feeding
for the outcomes of death, aspiration pneumonia, and comfort.34 35 In
September 2015, the Hospital Authority guideline on life-sustaining
treatment in the terminally ill was updated.36
Among other key EOL issues, it provides a clear and locally relevant
picture of CHF from the ethical perspective.36
In some geriatric step-down hospitals such as FYKH, CHF is already
incorporated as one of the management strategies for EOL patients. There
are many practical difficulties, however, if CHF is used in EOL care for
older patients with feeding difficulties in Hong Kong. Training of health
care teams, better nursing staff-to-patient ratio, and elderly-friendly
ward design are all essential elements for more elderly patients to be
offered CHF. Training of RCHE staff and staff-resident ratio will be vital
factors to determine whether CHF can be smoothly practised in the
community of Hong Kong. Without a well-prepared EOL plan, patients
receiving CHF will be given enteral tubes. The Social Welfare Department
can play a role in encouraging RCHEs in practising EOL care and CHF. More
training in EOL issues should be given to primary doctors who look after
older people with advanced and irreversible chronic medical illnesses.37
What’s next?
Many new developments in EOL care have been seen in
the past 10 years in Hong Kong. It is encouraging to see that the Hong
Kong SAR Government has begun to look into EOL care for older people in
the past few years. Many other organisations, including the Hong Kong
Jockey Club, have funded innovative programmes and research projects in
EOL themes. Notwithstanding, in the 2015 Quality of Death Index by The
Economist, Hong Kong ranks 22nd in the world (Singapore ranks 12th
and Taiwan sixth).38 This shows
that Hong Kong still has a lot to do to catch up with other Asian
neighbours. Further development and expansion of an EOL programme for
older people with advanced and irreversible chronic medical illnesses in
Hong Kong, in particular for those living in RCHEs, is needed. The
Hospital Authority has to work with the Fire Services Department to
establish guidelines for avoiding resuscitation among terminally ill
patients who have opted for no resuscitation in an advance directive or in
another form of ACP. At the time of writing this article, the Hong Kong
Special Administrative Region Government is exploring the realisation of
enduring power of attorney for health care decision-making, allowing
mentally incapacitated older people to express their wishes through a
chosen advocate.39 In academia,
more studies of EOL issues in the Hong Kong Chinese population are needed.
For instance, although the notion of ‘good death’ has been described in
western societies, the concept of ‘good death’ among Chinese population,
especially those who are frail or confused with multiple co-morbidities
including advanced dementia, has not been fully delineated. Accurate
prediction of life expectancy is often difficult in older non-cancer
patients, including those with advanced dementia and chronic irreversible
medical illnesses. Future studies are needed to establish a validated tool
applicable to local Chinese older patients in predicting mortality.
Declaration
The author has disclosed no conflicts of interest.
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