International journal of palliative nursing
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Various studies suggest that there is a preference among patients, professionals and the public for death to occur at home (Dunlop et al, 1989; Townsend et al, 1990; Hinton, 1994). Data indicates that some patients are denied the opportunity to exercise choice in the place of death. In areas where palliative rapid-response teams have been available more people have been able to die at home. ⋯ It reflects not only the views of the professionals involved but also focuses on the views of informal carers. Seventeen patients were referred to the rapid-response service in its first year of operation between April 1998 and March 1999. The service has shown some success in enabling patients to die at home and satisfaction with the service is high among professionals and lay carers.
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Efficient, comprehensive documentation is a vital element of all healthcare provision. It not only provides a record of care, but should reflect the quality of that care, enable continuity of care between practitioners and reinforce care standards. ⋯ This article describes the formulation of an integrated system of documentation which aims to address the failings of documentation procedures in one hospice/palliative care unit. The resulting system seeks to embody the rationale of palliative care within a dynamic, patient-centred approach to nursing documentation.