Palliative medicine
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Palliative medicine · Jul 1995
Comparative StudyThe McGill Quality of Life Questionnaire: a measure of quality of life appropriate for people with advanced disease. A preliminary study of validity and acceptability.
This is the first report on the McGill Quality of Life Questionnaire (MQOL), a questionnaire relevant to all phases of the disease trajectory for people with a life-threatening illness. This questionnaire differs from most others in three ways: the existential domain is measured; the physical domain is important but not predominant; positive contributions to quality of life are measured. ⋯ Construct validity of the subscales is demonstrated through the pattern of correlations with the items from the Spitzer Quality of Life Index. The importance of measuring the existential domain is highlighted by the finding that, of all the MQOL subscales and Spitzer items, only the meaningful existence subscale correlated significantly with a single item scale rating overall quality of life.
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Palliative medicine · Jul 1995
A regional survey of opioid use by patients receiving specialist palliative care.
A study was conducted to determine the patterns of opioid use in patients under the care of specialist palliative care (SPC) teams in Trent Region, both in the community and in inpatient settings. The design was a survey of point prevalence by case note and drug chart review. The case notes and prescription records of 1007 patients were reviewed, and data collected on age, sex, diagnosis, date of referral, care settings, opioid form and dose on referral, and most recent opioid form and dose. ⋯ The highest prevalence of potent opioid prescribing was in hospice IPUs, largely owing to the use of parenteral diamorphine. Conversely, IPUs had the lowest prevalence of weak opioids. Staff caring for patients with cancer must consider the need for downward as well as upward titration of opioid dosages.