Articles: palliative-care.
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No published protocol to guide the withdrawal of continuous positive airway pressure (CPAP) for patients with COVID-19 exists. ⋯ The use of the protocol ensures a comfortable and dignified death and supports the delivery of individualised care at the end of life. Future research on this topic should focus on qualitative outcomes and consider the applicability of this protocol in other patient groups.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Jul 2021
Design and evaluation of a novel mobile phone application to improve palliative home-care in resource-limited settings.
Mobile health (mHealth) provides an opportunity to use internet coverage in low- and middle-income countries to improve palliative care access and quality. ⋯ An outcomes-focused app and data dashboard are acceptable to caregivers and health-care professionals. They are beneficial in identifying, monitoring, and communicating patient outcomes and in allocating staff resource to those most in need.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Jul 2021
Healthcare Providers' Attitudes and Beliefs on Providing Palliative Care to Patients in Bahrain: Findings From a Qualitative Study.
Present studies suggested that cultural and religious factors, as well as law and policy, may have impeded the advancement of palliative care in the Middle East. Little is known about health care providers' perceptions of palliative care and the barriers to its development in the Gulf Cooperation Council. ⋯ This study unveiled the perceptions of palliative care among health care professionals in a Gulf Cooperation Council country. Six major barriers that hindered palliative care practice were identified. Future health care policy in the region needs to address these barriers within the current health care system while taking culture, religion, and social factors into consideration.
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All of us, without exception, must sooner or later face the inevitability of death. However, as comparative studies of different cultures show, the idea that death is something to be feared, denied or hidden away is far from universal. Undeniably, many people do not have a 'good' death, and those with a terminal illness experience suffering, pain, and even despair, a sense of dignity lost. ⋯ Witnessing the end-of-life can be a profound experience-what Kant would call the sublime-and it can unsettle, in a good way, anyone who comes to encounter it while unaware of its potential. My aim in this paper is to explain why I believe that the end of life in a palliative care context is an opportunity to experience the sublime and an authentic transformative experience. Finally, I describe four short stories to better understand what the experience of the sublime might be in the context of clinical practice.
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Background: Although clinic-based palliative care (PC) services have spread in the United States, little is known about how they function, and no studies have examined clinics that predominantly serve safety net populations. Objectives: To describe the PC clinics operating in safety net institutions in California. Design: Survey completed by PC program leaders Setting/Subjects: PC programs in California, USA, safety net medical centers. ⋯ An average of 77.4% (SD = 26.81) of clinic financing came from the health systems. Conclusions: Our respondents report using an interdisciplinary team approach to deliver guideline-concordant specialty PC. More research is needed to understand the most effective and efficient staffing models for meeting the PC needs of the safety net population.