Articles: palliative-care.
-
J Pain Symptom Manage · Oct 2020
Mapping paediatric palliative care development in the WHO-European region: Children living in low-middle income countries are less likely to access it.
Approximately 170,000 children in need of palliative care die every year in Europe without access to it. This field remains an evolving specialty with unexplored development. ⋯ PPC provision is flourishing across the region; however, development is less accentuated in low-to-middle-income countries. Efforts need to be devoted to the conceptualization and definition of the models of care used to respond to the unmet need of PPC in Europe. The question whether specialized services are required or not should be further explored. Strategies to regulate and cover patients in need should be adapted to each national health system.
-
Case Reports
Glycopyrrolate and the Management of "Death Rattle" in Patients with Myasthenia Gravis.
Death rattle commonly occurs at the end of life and is typically managed with anticholinergic agents. Myasthenia gravis is an autoimmune disorder characterized by fatigability of skeletal muscle, resulting from autoimmune destruction of acetylcholine receptors at the motor endplate. ⋯ Agents that antagonize acetylcholine activity (e.g., anticholinergic agents, such as glycopyrrolate) can, therefore, exacerbate myasthenia gravis. We discuss the case of a patient dying with myasthenia gravis that developed problematic "death rattle," and the successful use of glycopyrrolate in treating this symptom.
-
Background: Palliative care (PC) is a limited resource in health care systems. Many providers develop a PC interest later in their careers when it is difficult to relocate and compete for a limited number of training positions. In communities without an academic tertiary medical center, interprofessional PC community specialists are poised to deliver high-quality accessible PC to patients/families with needs beyond what can be addressed by primary care providers. ⋯ Conclusions: The inaugural student cohort reports high levels of engagement and satisfaction, including mastery and synthesis of didactic and experiential content through case integration projects. Students who worked in PC/hospice settings have advanced in their professions; others have transitioned to PC work. The MSPC has capacity to meet projected PC workforce gaps.
-
Am J Hosp Palliat Care · Oct 2020
Discussing Goals of Care in a Pandemic: Precedent for an Unprecedented Situation.
The COVID-19 pandemic has precipitated the need for frequent end-of-life discussions. The circumstances surrounding these conversations are quite atypical. Here, I describe one such goals-of-care discussion during the pandemic and how I relied on the precedent of prior goals-of-care discussions to guide me through an unprecedented situation.
-
Background: Adults with metastatic cancer frequently report anxiety and depression symptoms, which may impact health behaviors such as advance care planning (ACP). Objective: The study leveraged acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT), an evidence-based approach for reducing distress and improving health behaviors, and adapted it into a multimodal intervention (M-ACT) designed to address the psychosocial and ACP needs of anxious and depressed adults with metastatic cancer. The study evaluated M-ACT's acceptability, feasibility, and efficacy potential. ⋯ In this pilot, M-ACT showed no significant impact on pain interference. Increases in two of three mechanism measures predicted improvement on 80% of significant outcomes. Conclusions: The M-ACT intervention is feasible, acceptable, and shows potential for efficacy in community oncology settings; a randomized trial is warranted.