The American journal of hospice & palliative care
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Am J Hosp Palliat Care · Oct 2008
Review Case ReportsOral morphine overdose in a cancer patient antagonized by prolonged naloxone infusion.
An 80-year-old male was diagnosed with carcinoma in the lung with multiple bony metastases and had been prescribed pain medications as per World Health Organization analgesic ladder guidelines. However, he was not getting adequate pain relief and there were difficulties in titration of the morphine doses on an outpatient basis. Therefore, he was hospitalized for dose titration of oral morphine and was coprescribed amitriptyline and ranitidine. ⋯ After prolonged infusion of naloxone, he achieved his baseline vital parameters without any permanent sequel to the overdose event. This case report describes the possible causes of oral morphine overdose in the elderly and its successful treatment. To prevent such complications, one has to be very cautious of other factors such as drug interactions, particularly in the elderly.
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Although hospice care to assist the dying is widely available, palliative care, which focuses on living with chronic and life threatening illness and preparing the living for dying, is poorly understood. Only recently, palliative care has been mandated by the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations as a necessary intervention for facilities. ⋯ No specific Medicare reimbursement exists for palliative care in hospitals, and hospital administrators are generally not supportive of programs where no reimbursement exists. Developing a model palliative care program using a cost aversion financial model to quantify benefits of a palliative care programs is one strategy to address the reimbursement shortcomings.
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Am J Hosp Palliat Care · Oct 2008
Case ReportsClocking delirium: the value of the Clock Drawing Test with case illustrations.
Screening for impaired cognition is very important in geriatric and palliative medicine. There are several validated screening tools for delirium; the Confusion Assessment Method, The Memorial Delirium Assessment Scale, and the Bedside Confusion Scale. ⋯ The Clock Drawing Test is quickly and easily performed by patients and can be kept in the patient's medical record for future reference. However, very few studies have used the Clock Drawing Test to assess delirium in cancer and even fewer have used the Clock Drawing Test to determine response to interventions for delirium.
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Am J Hosp Palliat Care · Oct 2008
The attitudes of physicians toward the new "Dying Patient Act" enacted in Israel.
This study aims to determine what clinicians know about Israel's new "Dying Patient Act" and its recommendations, to examine their attitudes and perceptions about it, and to assess their willingness to increase their involvement in advance care planning. In-depth face-to-face interviews with 10 stakeholders and specialists in the health care system, and 4 focus groups with family physicians and geriatricians working in the hospital system and the community, were conducted. ⋯ These barriers can be divided into three main categories: the medical system, the law itself, and the characteristics of the Israeli population. The results may help augment educational programs on related subjects and increase the use of advance care planning.
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Am J Hosp Palliat Care · Oct 2008
ReviewPalliative care in Japan: current status and a nationwide challenge to improve palliative care by the Cancer Control Act and the Outreach Palliative Care Trial of Integrated Regional Model (OPTIM) study.
Palliative care is an essential part of integrated cancer treatment. To improve palliative care throughout Japan, a nationwide demonstration project, the Outreach Palliative Care Trial of Integrated Regional Model (OPTIM) study, is ongoing. This article reviews the current status and the problems of palliative care in Japan and introduces the OPTIM study. ⋯ Primary end points are quality of care reported by patients as well as the bereaved family, number of patients who received specialized palliative care services, and place of death. The interventions are comprehensively designed to cover all areas identified by the national task force. The OPTIM study will contribute to improve patients' quality of life by proposing a regional palliative care model suitable for Japan.