Der Internist
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Approximately one half of patients who receive the diagnosis of cancer still die as the result of their disease. To be able to adequately meet the patients and their families needs, it is essential that oncologists and palliative care physicians cooperate closely. How the recommendations of international institutions are concerning the cooperation between the fields of oncology and palliative care medicine can be approached is exemplified by the concepts developed in the Center for Integrated Oncology (CIO Cologne/Bonn) at the University Hospital in Cologne and discussed critically.
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Anesthesiologists and surgeons are increasingly faced with patients who are under long-term medication. Some of these drugs can interact with anaesthetics or anaesthesia and/or surgical interventions. As a result, patients may experience complications such as bleeding, ischemia, infection or severe circulatory reactions. ⋯ This means that the referring physician as well as anesthesiologists and surgeons at an early stage must deal with issues of perioperative pharmacotherapy. This review article is about the management of the major drug classes during the perioperative period. In addition to cardiac and centrally acting drugs and drugs that act on hemostasis and the endocrine system, special cases such as immunosuppressants and herbal remedies are mentioned.
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Even in the palliative context complementary therapy has a high value for patients and their relatives. In contrast to the methods of conventional medicine naturopathy as a holistic system has positive meanings for patients and their family. Complementary medicine in the palliative setting can be used as a supportive therapy in carefully selected cases. ⋯ Carefully providing information on these therapies is mandatory. Physicians should avoid losing patients' confidence in their competence and attention in their final course of disease. Also in palliative medicine a sensitive approach to the topic of complementary medicine is mandatory, which accounts for the eligible wishes of patients and their relatives but puts the patients safety first.
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Advanced incurable and life-threatening diseases of internal organs such as chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), heart failure, and terminal kidney failure are associated with considerable burden for the patients caused by pronounced symptoms (e.g., dyspnea, anxiety, depression) and unmet psychosocial needs. Nevertheless, in Germany addressing palliative medicine in the context of these disorders and co-treatment of these patients by cross-sector partnership with specialized palliative care physicians are not very developed. Against the background of an international perspective and current guidelines, general aspects of palliative care needs (symptom control, communication, advance care planning, etc.) are discussed together with the resultant implications for potential cooperation between internal medicine and palliative care as well as special aspects of the individual diseases (e.g., prognosis or implications of certain treatment options such as "automatic implantable cardioverter-defibrillator", AICD). Timely involvement of the specific expertise of palliative care medicine can ensure that the workload of the primary providers (and their teams) is reduced and better cross-sector management (hospital and home) of the severely ill patients and their families is achieved.
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Especially in the last 15 years Palliative Care and Palliative Medicine in Germany have increasingly attracted professional and public attention and made remarkable progress. One of the characteristics of Palliative Care in Germany is the differentiation of palliative care from hospice care. Under different viewpoints structure, target groups and aims of Palliative Care have been under discussion in the last 30 years, which made an impact on different forms in the provision of care. ⋯ It is important to differentiate the palliative care approach from general and specialized palliative care provision for patients with incurable progressive illness and in old age. In Germany 10-12% of all dying patients per year are in need of a specialized palliative care service. The growth in the group of the "very old" will be an important challenge for palliative care in the near future.