Psychiatric Aspects of Terminal Illness

Psychiatric Aspects of Terminal Illness

Psychiatric Aspects of Terminal Illness

On this page

Foundations in Terminal Care - End Game Blues

  • Terminal Illness: Incurable disease; death expected within months.
  • Palliative Care (PC): Improves quality of life for patients/families with life-threatening illness; symptom relief. Can start early.
  • Hospice Care: PC subset; prognosis ≤ 6 months; comfort, dignity focus.
  • C-L Psychiatry Role: Manages psychiatric issues (depression, delirium), aids coping, decision-making, grief.
  • Goals of Care: Symptom control, comfort, dignity, patient autonomy, shared decisions.

image

⭐ Palliative care can be initiated early with curative treatments, not just end-of-life; hospice is for prognosis ≤ 6 months.

Psychiatric Syndromes at EoL - Mood & Muddle

  • Depression: Common (15-25%); anhedonia, hopelessness. Differs from grief.

  • Anxiety Disorders: GAD, panic. Prevalence ~10%. SSRIs, short-term BZDs.

  • Adjustment Disorders: Distressed response to illness; common.

  • Delirium: Acute confusion; 25-85% (↑ near death). Hyper/hypoactive. 📌 I WATCH DEATH.

    • ⭐ Hypoactive delirium is more common than hyperactive delirium in terminally ill patients but is often underdiagnosed.

  • Table: Depression vs. Grief vs. Demoralization

    FeatureDepressionGriefDemoralization Syndrome
    CoreAnhedonia, pervasive sadnessEmptiness, loss-focusedLoss of meaning/purpose, hopeless
    Self-esteemOften ↓IntactMay be ↓, failure sense
  • Flowchart: Delirium Assessment (CAM) & Initial Management

Assessment in Palliative Settings - Diagnostic Dance

  • Challenges in Diagnosis:
    • Symptom overlap: physical illness symptoms vs. psychiatric ones.
    • Treatment side-effects mimicking mental health conditions.
  • Screening Tools:
    • ESAS (Edmonton Symptom Assessment System).
    • Adapted PHQ-2/PHQ-9 (Patient Health Questionnaire).
    • HADS (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale).
  • Comprehensive Assessment:
    • Detailed clinical interview.
    • Collateral history from family/caregivers.
  • Key Distinction: Differentiating normal grief from clinical depression.

⭐ Standard DSM criteria for depression can be challenging due to somatic symptom overlap. Prioritize psychological symptoms: anhedonia, pervasive guilt, hopelessness, and suicidal ideation.## Assessment in Palliative Settings - Diagnostic Dance

  • Challenges in Diagnosis:
    • Symptom overlap: physical illness symptoms vs. psychiatric ones.
    • Treatment side-effects mimicking mental health conditions.
  • Screening Tools:
    • ESAS (Edmonton Symptom Assessment System).
    • Adapted PHQ-2/PHQ-9 (Patient Health Questionnaire).
    • HADS (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale).
  • Comprehensive Assessment:
    • Detailed clinical interview.
    • Collateral history from family/caregivers.
  • Key Distinction: Differentiating normal grief from clinical depression. (image)[56616bdb-7b2f-4c0f-95de-01c82eb8cb5c]

⭐ Standard DSM criteria for depression can be challenging due to somatic symptom overlap. Prioritize psychological symptoms: anhedonia, pervasive guilt, hopelessness, and suicidal ideation.

Management & Comfort Measures - Soothing the Soul

  • Pharmacological Approaches:
    • Antidepressants (depression, anxiety): SSRIs (e.g., Sertraline 25-50mg OD), SNRIs (e.g., Venlafaxine XR 37.5mg OD), Mirtazapine (7.5-15mg HS for sleep/appetite).
    • Psychostimulants (fatigue, apathy): Methylphenidate (2.5-5mg morning/noon).
    • Anxiolytics (acute anxiety, panic): Short-acting Benzodiazepines (e.g., Lorazepam 0.5-1mg SOS).
    • Antipsychotics (delirium, agitation): Haloperidol (0.5-1mg), Risperidone (0.25-0.5mg), Olanzapine (2.5-5mg).
  • Non-Pharmacological Therapies:
    • Supportive psychotherapy, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT).
    • Meaning-centered psychotherapy, Dignity therapy.
    • Spiritual care.
  • Palliative Sedation: Considered for refractory, unbearable symptoms at end-of-life.

⭐ Methylphenidate can offer rapid (within days) improvement in fatigue, apathy, and depressive symptoms in terminally ill patients.

Flowchart: Managing Anxiety/Agitation

  • Capacity assessment & informed consent: foundational.
  • Advance directives (living will): patient autonomy.
  • Discussing prognosis & end-of-life preferences.
  • Breaking bad news: 📌 SPIKES protocol.
    • S: Setting, P: Perception, I: Invitation, K: Knowledge, E: Emotions/Empathy, S: Strategy/Summary. Breaking Bad News in the ED
  • Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) orders.
  • Withholding/withdrawing treatment: ethical decisions.
  • Euthanasia & PAS; India: passive euthanasia legal (advance directives).

⭐ The Supreme Court of India has recognized the right to die with dignity and legalized passive euthanasia through advance directives (Aruna Shanbaug case as a significant reference).

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • Depression is common, not normal grief; screen for suicidal risk.
  • Anxiety (fear of death/pain) may require cautious benzodiazepine use.
  • Delirium is frequent near death; identify and treat reversible causes.
  • Prioritize pain control; address opioid addiction misconceptions.
  • Discuss advance directives and palliative care for patient autonomy.
  • Clear communication with patient/family on prognosis and goals is vital.
  • Differentiate normal grief from complicated grief or MDD.

Practice Questions: Psychiatric Aspects of Terminal Illness

Test your understanding with these related questions

A patient complains of sadness of mood, increased lethargy, early morning awakening, loss of interest and reports no will to live and hears voices asking her to kill self. What is the diagnosis?

1 of 5

Flashcards: Psychiatric Aspects of Terminal Illness

1/8

_____ disorders are when a patient consciously creates physical and/or psychological symptoms in order to assume a "sick role" and get medical attention and sympathy (primary/internal gain)

TAP TO REVEAL ANSWER

_____ disorders are when a patient consciously creates physical and/or psychological symptoms in order to assume a "sick role" and get medical attention and sympathy (primary/internal gain)

Factitious

browseSpaceflip

Enjoying this lesson?

Get full access to all lessons, practice questions, and more.

Start Your Free Trial