Articles: palliative-care.
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Comprehensive palliative care, as exemplified by many state-of-the-art hospice programs, is the standard of care for the dying. Although palliative care is very effective, physicians, nurses, patients, families, and loved ones regularly face clinically, ethically, legally, and morally challenging decisions throughout the dying process. This is especially true when terminally ill patients are ready to die in the face of complex, difficult-to-treat suffering and request assistance from their health care providers. ⋯ The moral distinctions between these practices are critical to some but relatively inconsequential to others. This paper illustrates, through summaries of real clinical cases, how each of these practices might be used in response to patients in particular clinical circumstances, keeping in focus the patient's values as well as those of families, other loved ones, and health care providers. The challenge is to find the least harmful solution to the patient's problem without abandoning patients and their loved ones to unacceptable suffering or to acting in a more deleterious way on their own.
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The purpose of this study was to assess the analgesic potential of sustained-release (SR) bupropion for neuropathic pain. ⋯ This uncontrolled pilot study suggests that bupropion may be an effective and tolerated treatment for some patients with neuropathic pain. Blockade of norepinephrine reuptake may mediate this effect. The role of dopamine reuptake blockade is uncertain. A larger randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled study is currently underway to confirm these preliminary results.
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Palliative medicine · Mar 2000
ReviewThe level of need for palliative care: a systematic review of the literature.
Palliative care services have developed rapidly over the past 30 years, with little evaluation as to how needs have been met by these new services. As part of a systematic review of palliative care, evidence of the needs of patients and carers has been evaluated from the current literature. Of the total of 673 articles related to the 10 areas within the main review, 64 provided evidence on the need for palliative care services over the period from 1978 to 1997. ⋯ Using health service usage as an indicator of need, 700-1800 p/M with cancer and 350-1400 p/M with noncancer terminal illness would require a support team or specialist palliative home care nurse, with 400-700 cancer p/M and 200-700 noncancer p/M requiring inpatient terminal care. Studies indicate that at present usage, palliative care is being provided by 40-50 hospice beds/M. Despite this provision, there remains evidence that in certain areas of care such as pain control, there still remains a high degree of unmet need.
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The goal of this study was to assess clinical consensus regarding whether myofascial pain syndrome (MPS) is a legitimate and distinct diagnosis as well as the signs and symptoms characterizing MPS. ⋯ There was general agreement across specialties that MPS is a legitimate diagnosis distinct from fibromyalgia. There was a high level of agreement regarding the signs and symptoms essential or associated with a diagnosis of MPS. Differences across specialties are discussed. This survey provides a first step toward the development of consensus-based diagnostic criteria for MPS, which can then be validated empirically.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Mar 2000
Clinical TrialDemographic, symptom, and medication profiles of cancer patients seen by a palliative care consult team in a tertiary referral hospital.
In this retrospective study, the charts of 100 consecutive cancer patients who had been referred to a palliative care consult team within a tertiary acute care hospital were reviewed. Demographic characteristics, including reason for admission and disease status upon admission, length of stay, and discharge and admission location, were recorded. Symptom acuity, cognitive status, and risk for substance abuse were evaluated. ⋯ Eighty-nine of the 95 patients were living at home prior to admission and 34/95 were able to return home. Twenty died during hospitalization, 23 were transferred to a palliative care unit, and the remaining 18 were discharged to another hospital or long-term care. The patient's physician complied with the palliative care consult team's recommendation in 122/137 cases (89%).