Articles: palliative-care.
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Critical care clinics · Jul 2023
ReviewPalliative Care in the Intensive Care Unit: Past, Present, and Future.
In this article, the authors review the origins of palliative care within the critical care context and describe the evolution of symptom management, shared decision-making, and comfort-focused care in the ICU from the 1970s to the early 2000s. The authors also review the growth of interventional studies in the past 20 years and indicate areas for future study and quality improvement for end-of-life care among the critically ill.
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Palliative care (PC) education is a vital and required part of hematology-oncology fellows' education to build PC skills, attitudes, and knowledge. However, previous research has shown that education in PC is inadequate. This narrative review of the literature on primary PC education during hematology-oncology fellowship programs aims at identifying the current state of PC education, existing gaps, and potential future directions for improving PC education. ⋯ Overall, trainees and program leadership rate current PC education as varied, often inadequate, and in need of improvement. Educational interventions show that some form of PC education increases perceived knowledge and confidence in PC skills. Future studies are needed to develop the most effective and impactful educational models.
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Palliative medicine · Jul 2023
Observational StudyIatrogenic suffering at the end of life: An ethnographic study.
Across the developed West, a significant proportion of older people die in hospital It has been argued that an acute hospital setting is not well equipped to support dying well. A palliative approach, which involves recognising and alleviating suffering, might lead to improved quality of care. Yet suffering is an intangible and contested phenomenon and little is known about people's actual experiences of suffering in this clinical setting. ⋯ Acute care for older people in hospital was shaped by an overarching ideology of rescue which predicted and dictated the process of care. Suffering was not restricted to the direct experiences of life-limiting illness but was also associated with the experience of receiving care in an acute hospital setting. Avoiding or minimising iatrogenic suffering is an essential component of compassionate care.
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Palliative medicine · Jul 2023
Health professionals' experiences of rapport during telehealth encounters in community palliative care: An interpretive description study.
Despite the reported importance of rapport, there are knowledge gaps in the ways rapport is developed and experienced by health professionals during telehealth calls in palliative care. ⋯ Based on health professionals experiences of rapport it was determined that rapport is vitally important in telehealth calls, as it is in-person interactions. Rapport is a soft skill that can potentially be learned, practiced and mastery developed, although rapport in each interaction is not guaranteed. Patient and family experiences of rapport in the palliative telehealth area warrants further research and there is some urgency for health professional training in telehealth interpersonal skills.
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To identify improvement in knowledge and attitude of Family Medicine (FM) postgraduate trainees (PGT) towards Palliative care (PC) in order to provide effective care to the patients with advanced disease. ⋯ This PCM seems to be a useful tool for PC training in postgraduate medical education (PGME). This highlights some useful aspects for future applications in PC education and training.