Journal of pain and symptom management
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Sep 2000
Palliative care consultations: how do they impact the care of hospitalized patients?
To provide a detailed description of the recommendations of a Palliative Care Service (PCS) and to describe the impact of these recommendations on the care of terminally ill patients in an academic medical center, we describe data from all consecutive patients referred by their attending physicians to the PCS of an academic teaching hospital over a 15-month period. All patients were seen within 24 hours of consultation request. Data were collected prospectively on the day of discharge or death. ⋯ Recommendations increased to 5.3 per patient and the implementation rate increased to 97% (5.1 per patient) for the 44 patients transferred to the Palliative Care Unit (PCU). PCS consultations result in multiple recommendations with a very high implementation rate. The number of recommendations and the high implementation rate suggest a strong need for palliative care services within acute care hospitals.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Sep 2000
An international survey of undergraduate medical education in palliative medicine.
A 9-item mail survey dealing with availability and characteristics of undergraduate medical education programs in palliative medicine was sent to all medical schools in Canada (16) and the United Kingdom (UK) (30), and 129 randomly selected medical schools in the United States (US) and Western Europe. The overall response rate was 117/175 (67%). The highest percentage of mandatory (required by the university) rotations in palliative medicine was in the UK medical schools (14/22, 64%). ⋯ Besides the UK, mandatory (required) rotations in undergraduate palliative medicine education are lacking in Canadian, US, and Western European medical schools. The median number of 1 academic faculty member per responding medical school is discouraging. In order for undergraduate and postgraduate medical education in palliative medicine to improve, the number of both educational programs and faculty members will need to be increased.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Sep 2000
Psychological correlates of opioid use in patients with chronic nonmalignant pain: a preliminary test of the downhill spiral hypothesis.
There is still controversy surrounding the use of opioid medication for patients with chronic nonmalignant pain. Schofferman has argued that long-term opioid use leads to a "downhill spiral" associated with loss of functional capacity and a corresponding increase in depressed mood. The present study was a retrospective comparison of opioid users vs. non-users to determine whether: (a) users have higher levels of disability, medical visitation, depression, and pain; (b) the behavioral problems associated with opioid use persist after controlling for the influence of other medication; (c) opioid use is in fact a predictor of illness behavior; and (d) higher levels of opioid consumption are associated with higher levels of disability and depression. ⋯ Instead, we found that benzodiazepine use was significantly associated with activity level ( P<0.05), medical visitation ( P<0.01), domestic disability ( P<0.01), depression ( P <0.01), and to a lesser degree, disability days (P<0.1). Using somatization as a reference variable, we found that opioid use failed to explain a comparable amount of variance in illness behavior. Finally, there was no evidence that higher levels of opioid use were associated with higher levels of disability or depression.