Journal of pain and symptom management
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J Pain Symptom Manage · May 2021
"That is care that you just can't fake!": Identifying Best Practices for the Care of Vietnam Veterans at End of Life.
We reviewed the Veterans Health Administration Bereaved Family Survey's open-ended responses to understand end-of-life (EOL) care best practices for Vietnam and pre-Vietnam Veterans. ⋯ Patient-centered EOL care should include assigning a point of contact that follows the patient, educates the family on expectations, ensures the patient's changing needs are met, ensures the family has appropriate support, and communicates updates to the family throughout the patient's care continuum.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Apr 2021
Exploring the Impact of the Coronavirus Pandemic on Pediatric Palliative Care Clinician Personal and Professional Well-Being: a qualitative analysis of U.S. Survey Data.
The COVID-19 pandemic has had a dramatic impact on palliative care delivery and patient experiences. Less is known about the experiences and responses of palliative care clinicians. ⋯ Pediatric palliative care clinicians perceive a breadth of impacts from the COVID-19 pandemic. Ongoing clinician assessment is important as the pandemic continues.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Apr 2021
Honoring Veterans' Preferences: The Association between Comfort Care Goals and Care Received at the End of Life.
As part of its Life-Sustaining Treatment (LST) Decisions Initiative, the Veterans Health Administration (VA) in January 2017 began requiring electronic documentation of goals of care and preferences for Veterans with serious illness and at high risk for life-threatening events. ⋯ Findings support the VA's commitment to honoring of Veterans' preferences post introduction of its Life Sustaining Treatment Decisions Initiative.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Apr 2021
ReviewClinical aspects of palliative sedation in prospective studies. A systematic review.
Near the end of life when patients experience refractory symptoms, palliative sedation may be considered as a last treatment. Clinical guidelines have been developed, but they are mainly based on expert opinion or retrospective chart reviews. Therefore, evidence for the clinical aspects of palliative sedation is needed. ⋯ Assessment of refractory symptoms should include physical evaluation with standardized tools applied and interviews for psychological and existential evaluation by expert clinicians working in teams. Future research needs to evaluate the effectiveness of palliative sedation for refractory symptom relief.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Apr 2021
ReviewTwo Questions about the Design of Cluster Randomized Trials: A Tutorial.
This is a short tutorial on two key questions that pertain to cluster randomized trials (CRTs): 1) Should I perform a CRT? and 2) If so, how do I derive the sample size? In summary, a CRT is the best option when you "must" (e.g., the intervention can only be administered to a group) or you "should" (e.g., because of issues such as feasibility and contamination). CRTs are less statistically efficient and usually more logistically complex than individually randomized trials, and so reviewing the rationale for their use is critical. The most straightforward approach to the sample size calculation is to first perform the calculation as if the design were randomized at the level of the patient and then to inflate this sample size by multiplying by the "design effect", which quantifies the degree to which responses within a cluster are similar to one another. ⋯ Sample size calculations should include sensitivity analyses, as inputs from the literature can lack precision. Collaborating with a statistician is essential. To illustrate these points, we describe an ongoing CRT testing a mobile-based app to systematically engage families of intensive care unit patients and help intensive care unit clinicians deliver needs-targeted palliative care.