Journal of palliative medicine
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Background: Foreign national patients and families can face life-limiting illness and end-of-life care far from home; this palliative need has not been well described. Case Description: We present a case of a 20-year-old Ugandan patient diagnosed with metastatic alveolar rhabdomyosarcoma who presented to a pediatric academic medical center in California. Despite treatment, her disease progressed and she was unable to return to Uganda due to symptom burden. ⋯ The family additionally cultivated a support system within the hospital and local African communities. This was illustrated in the memory album the patient created, and in her family's extensive bereavement support. Conclusions: This case explores opportunities for individualized psychosocial care and community-based support to enhance palliative care for foreign national patients and families.
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Patients with advanced cancer can develop symptomatic hypoglycemia at the end of life which can be associated with significant distress. We report the case of a man with metastatic urothelial carcinoma who developed acute-onset, recurrent, and symptomatic hypoglycemia concerning for non-islet cell tumor hypoglycemia (NICTH). ⋯ He was transferred to the inpatient palliative service, and on this treatment regimen, did not have additional distressing hypoglycemia. For patients with metastatic cancer and symptomatic hypoglycemia, applying a palliative-based framework with discussion of prognosis, values, and goals will lead to goal-concordant care at the end of life that can include aggressive maintenance of euglycemia to relieve suffering.
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Patients with cancer and their families comprise a significant population served by palliative care. Close collaboration between oncology clinicians and palliative care teams has demonstrated improved patient-centered care, especially when this care is integrated early in the course of the disease. The American Society of Clinical Oncology recently released their updated clinical practice guidelines for palliative care in oncology, which provide new opportunities for collaboration to expand the scope of care.
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Background: The aim is to implement knowledge of basic palliative care in selected departments by the Hub and Spokes model. Methods: Implementation of basic palliative care was designed as a stepwise training model by skills lectures over a time period of 2 years. In each of the six selected oncological and nononcological departments, one physician and two nurses were trained in semi-annual half-day meetings as expert representatives within their departments. ⋯ Implementation was more appropriate in the stationary sector. Implementation costs were low. Conclusion: Expansion of the system into a second follow-up period, including more departments, is planned to ensure sustainability.
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Background: Prior studies reveal a lack of illness understanding and prognostic awareness among patients with hematological malignancies. We evaluated prognostic awareness and illness understanding among patients with acute leukemia and multiple myeloma (MM) and measured patient-hematologist discordance. Methods: We prospectively enrolled patients with acute leukemia and MM at Mount Sinai Hospital or Yale New Haven Hospital between August 2015 and February 2020. ⋯ For both leukemia and MM cohorts, patients were significantly more likely to respond "don't know" or deferring to a faith-based response with 88 (64%) and 34 (71%), respectively, compared with only 28 (20%) and 11 (23%) of hematologists, respectively. Conclusions: We observed significant discordance regarding prognosis and GOC among patients with hematological malignancies and their hematologists. These data support future interventions to improve prognostic understanding among this patient population to facilitate informed treatment choices.