Palliative medicine
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Palliative medicine · Sep 2004
ReviewSystematic review of the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, carers and health and social care professionals.
To determine the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, informal carers and health and social care professionals involved in their care in primary and secondary care settings. ⋯ There is a need to improve education and knowledge about specialist palliative care and hospice care amongst health and social care professionals, patients and carers. Standardized referral criteria need to be developed. Further work is also needed to assess the needs of those not currently accessing palliative care services.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 2004
ReviewMethods for assessment of cognitive failure and delirium in palliative care patients: implications for practice and research.
The most commonly encountered clinical conditions presenting with cognitive failure (CF) are delirium, dementia and amnestic disorders. Of these, delirium is probably the most prevalent in palliative care, and it is potentially reversible. Thus, improvement in diagnostics seems warranted. ⋯ The term CF is an imprecise description of a loss in one or more of the cognitive functions. The interchangeable use of CF as a description of specific diagnoses should be avoided, as this contributes to prevalence rates that are not representative. Assessment tools that discriminate between the different diagnostic entities presenting with CF should be used in future studies.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 2004
Multicenter StudyEmotional burden of nurses in palliative sedation therapy.
Palliative sedation therapy is often required in terminally ill cancer patients, and may cause emotional burden for nurses. The primary aims of this study were 1) to clarify the levels of nurses' emotional burden related to sedation, and 2) to identify the factors contributing to the burden levels. ⋯ A significant number of nurses felt serious emotional burden related to sedation. To relieve nurses' emotional burden, we encourage 1) management efforts to reduce work overload, 2) a team approach to resolving conflicting opinions, especially between physicians and nurses, 3) co-ordination of early patient-family meetings to clarify their preferred end-of-life care, 4) education and training about sedation specifically focused on interpersonal skills, systematic approaches to diagnosing refractory symptoms, minimum life-threatening potency in sedation, and ethical principals differentiating sedation from euthanasia, and 5) exploring nurses' personal values through the patient-centered principle.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 2004
Multicenter StudyEvolving spinal analgesia practice in palliative care.
Intraspinal analgesia can be helpful in some patients with intractable pain. Over 15 years palliative care professionals evolved their spinals policy through a repeated series of evaluations, discussions and literature reviews. One hundred intraspinal lines were then reviewed. ⋯ Current policy is to use continuous infusions of diamorphine and bupivacaine in a 1:5 ratio through externalized intrathecal lines. The lines are effective in approximately two thirds of patients and can be kept in place for up to 18 months. The policy continues to be updated and common documentation is now in place.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 2004
Equity of access to adult hospice inpatient care within north-west England.
There is a growing debate about the question of equity of access to hospice and palliative care services. Even countries with relatively well developed palliative care systems are considered to have problems of access and inequity of provision. Despite these concerns, we still lack a relevant evidence base to serve as a guide to action. ⋯ Our research is subject to a number of caveats--it is limited to inpatient hospice provision and does not include other kinds of inpatient and community-based palliative care services. Likewise, we recognise that not everyone with cancer will require palliative care and also that palliative care needs exist among those with nonmalignant conditions. Nevertheless, our methodology is one that can also be applied more generally.