Palliative sedation

Education and communication about palliative sedation






 DO

  • Introduce palliative sedation early during Advance Care Planning conversations in preparation for the last stage of life and at the child's dying stage.
  • Check with the multidisciplinary team that all conditions for palliative sedation are met. 
  • Consult experts and/or paediatric palliative care teams about communication about palliative sedation and the implementation of palliative sedation.
  • When palliative sedation has been decided upon, discuss the process of palliative sedation with the child, parents and/or loved ones. Pay attention to purpose of palliative sedation, course of the dying process, implementation of palliative sedation, and agreements between child, parents and caregivers.

Implementation of continuous palliative sedation









 DO

  • Use the step-by-step plan for the recommended agents and corresponding dosage schedule in continuous palliative sedation.
  • If symptom-oriented medication (e.g., morphine) is given continuously parenterally, continue the symptom-oriented medication and the medication for the purpose of continuous palliative sedation via a separate pump to prevent unwanted increase in symptom-oriented medication when the dosage of sedatives is increased.
  • In children with alcohol abuse, drug use and/or higher doses of psychopharmaceuticals (including chronic use of benzodiazepines with the indication of antiepileptic drugs), consult with paediatric palliative care team prior to palliative sedation.
  • If in doubt or questions about necessary dosages, consult with a paediatric palliative care team.



 Consider
  • In case of no or little effect of subcutaneous administration of midazolam and/or levomepromazine, consider switching to intravenous administration.
  • When administering medication intravenously, consider administering boluses slowly over several minutes because of the risk of apnoea with some agents.

Implementation of acute palliative sedation







 DO

  • Deploy acute palliative sedation when all of the following criteria are present: 
    • An acute life-threatening complication that cannot be treated causally or symptomatically; 
    • The complication leads to unbearable suffering; 
    • The child is expected to die within minutes/hours due to the complication. 
  • Anticipate if acute complications are expected during the palliative phase by: 
    • Discussing the possibility in advance with child, parents and/or loved ones; 
    • Creating a plan (available to all involved) for acute sedation if needed.

Evaluation of palliative sedation



 DO

  • Evaluate the effect of palliative sedation after 30 minutes using comfort score and/or FLACC score and also pain score if pain is among the refractory symptoms. If in doubt whether the effect is sufficient, consider increasing the dose.
  • If in doubt about medication/doses used, consult readily with a paediatric palliative care team.


 Consider
  • In case of no or little effect of subcutaneous administration of midazolam and/or levomepromazine, consider switching to intravenous administration.