As reported in the
Washington Post:
Palliative transport lets families move critically ill children from the
hospital intensive care unit to their home or hospice, with the
expectation they will die within minutes to days after removing life
support...
At the Mayo Clinic, palliative transport has helped culturally diverse
families carry out end-of-life wishes for their dying children. In one
case, a newborn girl rode 400 miles by ambulance to return to her Amish
community, where she was extubated and died in her parents’ arms, in the
company of her 11 siblings. In another, an 8-month-old Native American
girl traveled 600 miles by air and ground ambulance to her rural tribal
reservation, where she could participate in end-of-life rituals that
could not be done in the hospital...
These trips, which can cost thousands of dollars, are typically offered
free to families, paid for by hospitals or charities. Most children are
taken home, where they transition to receiving care from hospice staff.
Some go instead to hospice facilities...
And dying at home is not what every family wants. “We
do sometimes overly romanticize the death at home,” Thorvilson
acknowledged. Some parents would much rather have a child die in the
hospital, with familiar nurses at the bedside for medical and emotional
support. Some would rather keep this traumatic experience away from
where they live...
Mayo’s Thorvilson, who has worked closely on a half-dozen palliative
transports, said it’s possible these last-minute trips from ICU to home
could be avoided by earlier referrals to hospice, which might get kids
home sooner. But when children with complex illnesses get sick, she
said, “sometimes it’s hard to know whether this is just another bump in
the road, or whether this is the natural end of the child’s life.”
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