International journal of palliative nursing
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An increasing number of children require care at home owing to life-limiting illness. In addition, there is growing recognition of the specific care needs of such children and their families, and it is anticipated that recent developments in children's palliative care will result in more people accessing these services. In the Republic of Ireland (ROI), community palliative care clinical nurse specialists (CNSs), who are not registered children's nurses, contribute significantly to the support of these children and families. ⋯ Four key themes emerged: gaining access to the child and family, role complexities, pressures of caring, and support strategies. Provision of community children's palliative care by the CNS is complex. The participants demonstrated their commitment to consult, coordinate, negotiate, and ultimately deliver the care required by children and families, but against a background of issues relating to accessing the patient and family, the complexity of the CNS role, and the pressures that such work incurs.
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On World Hospice and Palliative Care Day-8 October 2011-the Worldwide Palliative Care Alliance (WPCA) launched a global update highlighting the progress that has been made in hospice and palliative care over the past 5 years (Lynch et al, 2011; WPCA 2011). Encouragingly, the study shows that there has been a marked increase in the number of countries providing one or more hospice and palliative care services-from 49% of countries in 2006 to 58% in 2011. Here we explore some of the key factors behind this progress, focusing particularly on advocacy and policy.
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Palliative care in Malaysia developed in the 1990s to improve the quality of life of people with advanced cancer. Like many other countries, Malaysia faces its own challenges in providing palliative care to patients and their families. In Malaysian culture, families play a significant part in providing care to the dying. Connecting with families in patient care is therefore important. This paper reports a focused literature review evaluating studies on the care of the families of terminally ill people in palliative care environments in Malaysia. ⋯ The studies indicate the importance of the nurse-family interaction in providing optimal and culturally appropriate palliative care. This paper emphasizes the need for research into the nurse's role in family care and for developing a theory appropriate to the Malaysian culture and other countries with cultural diversity.
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Over recent years there have been several political imperatives in the UK directed toward children's palliative care and ensuring that services are high-quality, coordinated, family-centred, and able to meet the needs of children with complex disabilities. In addition, in 2010 the health and social care regulation authority in England-the Care Quality Commission (CQC)-aligned hospices with regulation and inspection requirements. ⋯ CHaL educators worked with a research team to develop a unified strategy that was based on evidence of good practice, embedded in required CQC outcomes, and validated with a wider audience. The resultant strategy contains a set of four key learning and development principles that are applicable and transferable across different hospices.
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Pain is a common symptom for long-term care residents, particularly those in need of palliative care. However, pain assessment in residents who have communication limitations is challenging. A study was conducted with the aim of developing a pain assessment tool that could feasibly be used by direct care providers in long-term care with minimal training yet demonstrating strong psychometric properties. ⋯ The validity and reliability results of the PACI tool were acceptable, and the convergent validity was moderately strong. A moderate level of interobserver agreement was evident, with kappas ranging from 0.46 to 0.63 for the individual items and a kappa score of 0.59 for the total tool score. The overall results of this study support the psychometric properties and feasibility of the PACI tool, offering preliminary support for its use in clinical practice.