Palliative medicine
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Palliative medicine · Jan 1998
Evaluation of a hospital-based palliative support service with particular regard to financial outcome measures.
The object of this study was a financial assessment of a hospital-based palliative support service, to be made by comparing the study group with a matched historical control group and a group of contemporary reference patients. The staff consisted of one full-time nurse supported by a surgeon one half-day per week. ⋯ These three outcome measures all focus on the most care-intensive last months of life and appeared to be sensitive enough to identify economic advantages of palliative care intervention. The palliative support service defrayed its own costs and in excess of that saved another SK17000 per patient (US$2500).
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Palliative medicine · Nov 1997
Randomized Controlled Trial Clinical TrialA randomized crossover study comparing the efficacy and tolerability of a novel once-daily morphine preparation (MXL capsules) with MST Continus tablets in cancer patients with severe pain.
The efficacy, tolerability and 24-h duration of action of MXL capsules, a novel once-daily morphine preparation, were compared with twice-daily morphine tablets (MST Continus tablets) in patients with severe cancer pain. Eighty-five patients were recruited to this randomized, double-blind, double-dummy, crossover study. There was no significant difference between the two treatment groups in the number of occasions that escape medication was required, the pain scores at each of three time points throughout the day, and the number of nights woken due to pain. ⋯ Sixteen patients withdrew from the study, of whom 13 withdrew for nontreatment-related reasons. There was no difference between the preparations in terms of expressed treatment preference. MXL capsules were shown to provide effective analgesia over the 24-h dosing interval which was comparable to that of MST Continus tablets administered twice daily.
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Open pulmonary tuberculosis has been increasingly seen in HIV-infected patients in this hospice. Multidrug-resistant tuberculosis is a new and serious threat and two cases have occurred in our hospice in the past two years. This infection poses a health risk to staff, patients, relatives and volunteers. Palliative care teams in the hospice and community must have an index of suspicion for this infection, take active measures to ensure patient compliance with tuberculosis treatment and be prepared to implement infection control guidelines when needed.