Articles: palliative-care.
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This article examines the impact legislative developments in the UK have had, and are likely to have, on health care in general and how specialist palliative care providers may need to adapt to these changes. The focus of adaptation is on communication and multidisciplinary teamwork. A brief review of the previous Conservative government's reforms offers a background to understanding how the current Labour government agendas affecting health and social care have been developed. Ideas are put forward to ensure that specialist palliative care provision is maintained and developed within the current structure of the health service.
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J Okla State Med Assoc · Apr 2001
The OU College of Medicine responds to the demand for educating medical professionals in palliative care.
This past decade the medical community saw an increase of national interest in the training and educating of physicians to provide quality end-of-life care for patients. This article describes the efforts of the University of Oklahoma College of Medicine to respond to the demand for educating medical professionals in end-of-life care. A Palliative Care Program was created to develop and implement new courses, seminars, and lectures for medical students, residents, and practicing physicians. Palliative medicine is in the process of being integrated into the OU academic medical environment so that all trainees, regardless of their educational level, have the opportunity for didactic and clinical exposure to end-of-life care.
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In May 2000, the Norwegian Medical Association appointed a working group to propose guidelines for the practice of palliative sedation to dying patients (terminal sedation). The present study is part of this work. The aim of the study was to register to what extent this form of palliation is used in Norwegian hospitals, on what indications, how decisions are reached, and whether the treatment is considered necessary. The definition of palliative sedation given was: induction and maintenance of sleep for the relief of pain or other types of suffering in a patient close to death. The intention is exclusively to relieve intractable pain, not to shorten the patient's life. ⋯ Though it has some methodological weaknesses, this study confirms the need for national guidelines.
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Dyspnea is a common problem among patients with interstitial fibrosis, lung cancer, cystic fibrosis, and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. The slow but steady progression of such diseases, often punctuated by acute exacerbations or secondary illnesses, can lead to decision-making dilemmas among patients and their caregivers, such as when to accept mechanical ventilation, when to forgoe aggressive therapies, and when to make formal end-of-life care plans. ⋯ Four management strategies for dyspnea are discussed: reducing ventilatory impedance, reducing ventilatory demand, improving respiratory muscle function, and altering central perception. Physicians should encourage end-stage lung disease patients and their families to discuss issues such as hospitalization and mechanical ventilation, to prepare advance directives, and to participate in a plan to manage their dyspnea.