@article {Gill367, author = {Andrew Gill and Clare Rayment and Chris Kane}, title = {21 Identification and management of delirium in the palliative inpatient unit}, volume = {8}, number = {3}, pages = {367--367}, year = {2018}, doi = {10.1136/bmjspcare-2018-mariecurie.21}, publisher = {British Medical Journal Publishing Group}, abstract = {Introduction Delirium is an acute confusional state. The incidence of delirium in palliative care units is estimated between 13\% and 42\% (Hosie 2014). Delirium is associated with an increase in mortality and length of hospice stay yet it is poorly identified. Up to 50\% of cases of delirium are reversible (Lawlor 2000) as such early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment could relieve the suffering.Aim To assess identification and management of delirium in two hospices.Methods Retrospective notes analysis to identify patients with delirium whether they were coded with a delirium diagnosis and whether the management of delirium followed best practice.Results 77 inpatients across two hospices were assessed in one month in 2018. There were 37 episodes of possible delirium only five were coded as delirium none had assessment with a recognised delirium tool. Reversibility was considered for 48 episodes; it was not clear from the documentation that this was all possible reversible causes. Family were kept informed 94\% of the time. A management plan was documented for five patients.Conclusion Delirium was being considered but not documented a common problem in medical notes. Documentation of a management plan was poor but when there was a plan best practice was followed with non-pharmacological management then low dose antipsychotic with stronger sedation reserved for terminal agitation. An education feedback loop formal training on delirium and design of an electronic medical record template to prompt the management of delirium is ongoing. Practice will be reassessed three months after this intervention.References. Hosie A, Davidson P, Agar M, et al. Delirium prevalence incidence and implications for screening in specialist palliative care inpatient settings: A systematic review. Palliative Medicine2013;27(6):486{\textendash}498.. Lawlor P, Gagnon B, Mancini I, et al. Occurrence causes and outcome of delirium in patients with advanced cancer: A prospective study. Archives of Internal Medicine2000;160(6):786{\textendash}794.}, issn = {2045-435X}, URL = {https://spcare.bmj.com/content/8/3/367.3}, eprint = {https://spcare.bmj.com/content/8/3/367.3.full.pdf}, journal = {BMJ Supportive \& Palliative Care} }