Palliative medicine
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Palliative medicine · Sep 1998
Relationships between symptom relief, quality of life, and satisfaction with hospice care.
Hospices were founded to alleviate suffering at the end of life. Quality improvement in hospices should, therefore, target patients' subjective assessments of their care and its outcomes. However, little is known about the relationships among subjective measures of care among hospice patients. ⋯ The symptom, quality of life, and satisfaction scales all had sufficient precision to identify patients with significant changes between the two interviews. It can be concluded that satisfaction with hospice care was associated with quality of life more than symptoms, although symptoms became important later during inpatient stays. Patients can assess their care and can provide valuable information for improving palliative care.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 1998
The relationship between opioid use and laxative use in terminally ill cancer patients.
The frequency of the use of laxatives, and the relationship between doses of laxatives and of opioid analgesia, were determined by a prospective study of 498 hospice inpatients with advanced cancer. Laxatives were required by 87% of patients taking oral strong opioids, 74% of those on weak opioids and 64% of those not receiving opioid analgesia. ⋯ However, the dose of laxative required is likely to be significantly higher if an opioid is being taken than if not. The form of the relationship between laxative and strong opioid doses is what might be expected from the mediation of opioid-induced constipation by opioid receptors.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 1998
Health professionals' responses to multiple sclerosis and motor neurone disease.
This study compares the responses of health professionals to multiple sclerosis (MS) and motor neurone disease (MND) in order to determine similarities and variations in responses to the two disorders and the issues critical to caring for patients with these conditions. Health professionals were more negative about MND compared with MS in terms of the amount they felt able to offer patients, their confidence in managing patients and their ability to convey hope. For a number of issues concerning the management of patients, the level of difficulty experienced by health professionals was similar for both MS and MND. ⋯ Issues which were comparatively more difficult for MS than MND were changes in patients' affect, cognition and personality, problems with planning care because of the disorder's unpredictable course, problems with diagnosis such as making and disclosing the diagnosis, and the tendency for patients to be difficult or demanding. Some notable differences in responses between health professionals in different health care settings were found. The findings have implications for changing health professionals' conceptualization of 'hope', developing ways of improving communication between health professionals in different health care settings so as to enable them to learn from each other's expertise and experiences and redressing gaps in service provision, especially for young people with MS.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 1998
Where do cancer patients die? Ten-year trends in the place of death of cancer patients in England.
Although studies have found that 50-70% of cancer patients would prefer to die at home, there has been a trend towards the hospitalization of the dying in many countries. No study has attempted to analyse the changes in place of death in detail. The aim was to analyse the 10-year trends in place of death of cancer patients, by region and by diagnosis, within England. ⋯ Although hospital is still the most common place of death from cancer, the percentage of cancer patients who die in hospital is reducing. The largest rise is in the increasing use of hospices and communal establishments, including residential and nursing homes. Given the ageing population, this trend is likely to continue.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 1998
The attitude of health care professionals toward the availability of hospice services for cancer patients and their carers in Saudi Arabia.
The main objectives of this study were to assess cancer care and the need for establishing hospice/palliative care for cancer patients and their carers in Saudi Arabia. Six-hundred-and-ninety-five participants (136 cancer patients, 161 informal carers, and 398 health care professionals) were recruited from oncology centres in four major regions of Saudi Arabia. ⋯ It was also reported that the shortage of drugs used in cancer management, the severe restriction of prescribing narcotic analgesics and lack of cancer care knowledge were the major impediments to providing good cancer care. Thus, the strong inter-relationship among Saudi families, the present poor status of cancer care, cancer patients' and their carers' acceptability of hospice services and of the willingness of health care professionals to receive training in palliative care, illustrate the need for initiating the provision of palliative care services in the Saudi health system.