Articles: palliative-care.
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Postgraduate medicine · Aug 2024
ReviewThe impact of palliative care on the frailty-stroke continuum: from theoretical concepts to practical aspects.
With a constant increase in prevalence and incidence worldwide, stroke remains a public health issue in the 21st century. Additionally, population aging inevitably leads to increased vulnerability in the general population, a clinical state known as frailty. While there are adequate guidelines on the treatment of stroke in the acute setting, there are a lot of gaps regarding the chronic management of stroke patients, particularly the frail ones. ⋯ After understanding the role of palliative care in managing this kind of patients, the authors discuss the most relevant practical aspects aiming to offer an individualized framework for daily clinical practice. The novel approach consists of developing a four-step scale for characterizing frail stroke patients, with the final aim of providing personalized treatment and correctly evaluating prognosis. By pointing out the limitations of current guidelines and the challenges of new research directions, this article opens the pathway for the better evaluation of frail stroke patients, offering a better perception of patients' prognosis.
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Observational Study
Utilisation of palliative/ end-of-life care practice recommendations in the burn intensive care unit of a Ghanaian tertiary healthcare facility: An observational study.
The need to integrate palliative/end-of-life care across healthcare systems is critical considering the increasing prevalence of health-related suffering. In burn care, however, a general lack of practice recommendations persists. Our burn unit developed practice recommendations to be implemented and this study aimed to examine the components of the practice recommendations that were utilised and aspects that were not to guide further training and collaborative efforts. ⋯ We find a great need to equip burn care staff with general palliative care skills. Also, ongoing collaboration/ partnership between the burn care and palliative care teams need to be strengthened. Active family engagement, identifying, and resolving other patient needs beyond the physical aspect also needs further attention to ensure a comprehensive approach to end of life care in the burn unit.
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Background: Literature reviews reveal poor knowledge and awareness of palliative care in the public. Health literacy deficits impact access to palliative care. Objectives: The aim of this manuscript is to explore the public perception of palliative care in Germany. ⋯ The public's perception of palliative care is mainly medicine oriented, referring to inpatient care for the immediately dying; however, further significant misperceptions were scarce. Conclusions: The public perception shows an indistinct picture of palliative care, and some misconceptions about the objectives and areas of responsibility of the subject, meanwhile, palliative care is known to a majority of people. Understanding partly incomplete pictures of patients and relatives may help to react appropriately in staff-patient interactions and improve public relations.
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Introduction: Identifying the evolving needs of patients with advanced heart failure (AdHF) and triaging those at high risk of death can facilitate timely referrals to palliative care and advance patient-centered individualized care. There are limited models specific for patients with end-stage HF. We aim to identify risk factors associated with up to three-year all-cause mortality (ACM) and describe prognostic models developed or validated in AdHF populations. ⋯ Ten prognostic models developed/validated on AdHF patients displayed acceptable model performance [area under the curve (AUC) range: 0.71-0.81]. Among the ten models, the model for end-stage-liver disease (MELD-XI) and acute decompensated HF with N-terminal pro b-type natriuretic peptide (ADHF/proBNP) model attained the highest discriminatory performance against short-term ACM (AUC: 0.81). Conclusions: To enable timely referrals to palliative care interventions, further research is required to develop or validate prognostic models that consider the evolving landscape of AdHF management.