Journal of palliative medicine
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Introduction: Despite increasing evidence of the benefits of spiritual care and nurses' efforts to incorporate spiritual interventions into palliative care and clinical practice, the role of spirituality is not well understood and implemented. There are divergent meanings and practices within and across countries. Understanding the delivery of spiritual interventions may lead to improved patient outcomes. ⋯ Studies showed that spiritual interventions are associated with improved psychological and spiritual patient outcomes. The studies' different methodological approaches and the lack of detail made it challenging to compare, replicate, and validate the applicability and circumstances under which the interventions are effective. Further studies utilizing rigorous methods with operationalized definitions of spiritual nursing care are recommended.
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Case Reports
A Successful Case of Switching Treatment from Ketamine to Methadone for Complex Neuropathic Pain.
Background: Methadone is frequently used for the management of complex pain at the end of life by palliative care specialists. It is also used in low doses as an add-on therapy to chronic opioid treatment of cancer-related pain, usually with good effect, and without any reported severe adverse effects. However, there are few reports of switching from ketamine to methadone. ⋯ Switching from ketamine to methadone to maintain analgesia was successfully carried out without impacting activities of daily living. Established measurement tools, such as numerical rating scale, Douleur Neuropathique, Functional Independence Measure, and Barthel Index, were used. Conclusion: Switching from ketamine to methadone may be beneficial in relieving refractory cancer-related neuropathic pain without decreasing functioning.
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Case Reports
Hoigne Syndrome Secondary to Intravenous Lidocaine in a Woman with Metastatic Ewing Sarcoma.
Introduction: Palliative care providers are increasingly using lidocaine infusions for refractory cancer pain. Hoigne syndrome (HS) is a rare psychiatric reaction that has been reported after local anesthetic usage, but has not been described in the palliative care setting. ⋯ She had improvement with the addition of benzodiazepines and lowering the lidocaine infusion rate. Discussion: Palliative care providers should be aware of HS as a possible side effect of lidocaine infusions and the unique challenges in managing it in patients near the end of life.
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Objective: The aim of this study was to evaluate an adult home palliative care (HPC) program for multiple insurance product lines using multiple vendors to determine if the annual costs of health care decreased for those enrolled in HPC. Study Design: Of the 506 members who were referred to and qualified for palliative care in 2019, a retroactive review was done comparing annual health care costs between the 396 members in the enrolled group and the 110 members in the group receiving usual care. Methods: The total health care costs for the calendar year 2019 were compared between the group enrolled in HPC and those who received usual care. ⋯ Conclusions: Adult home-based palliative care delivered by multiple vendors (consisting of multiple insurance product lines) to a population is effective in decreasing total medical costs by 16.7% during a calendar year compared with a control group. The gross savings for those enrolled for 6-12 months (17.9%) were greater than the gross savings for those enrolled for 1-5 months (15.8%). The savings were most prominent for the commercial insurance product, while an increase in cost was seen for the Medicaid product.
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Randomized Controlled Trial
Performance of Patient-Reported Outcome Measures in a Large Pragmatic Trial of Home-Based Palliative Care (HomePal): Methodological and Practical Considerations for Embedded Patient-Centered Design.
Background: The research enterprise has embraced patient centeredness in embedded efficient pragmatic trials, but limited data exist on using patient-reported outcomes (PROs) collected as part of usual clinical care for research. Objectives: We sought to assess the performance of different assessment methods for obtaining PROs in a pragmatic cluster randomized trial (HomePal study) designed to compare two models of home-based palliative care (HBPC). Design: Descriptive analytics, comparative trends, and psychometric performance of PROs collected in the HomePal study; measures included Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS), PROMIS-10, and others administered at baseline, 1, and 6 months. ⋯ These differences persisted with follow-up ESAS measures. Conclusions: We identified significant variability in PRO responses between different surveyors and whether proxy interaction was needed suggesting complex issues around PRO measure performance for pragmatic embedded trials. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03694431.