Articles: palliative-care.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Jun 2024
Telehealth Preferences among Patients with Advanced Cancer in the Post COVID-19 Vaccine Era.
Few studies have examined patient preferences for telehealth in palliative care after the availability of COVID-19 vaccines. We examined patient preferences for video versus in-person visits and factors contributing to preferences in the postvaccine era. ⋯ Patients expressed strong preference for video over in-person visits in the outpatient palliative care setting.
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J Pain Palliat Care Pharmacother · Jun 2024
Addressing the Critical Gap: Ensuring Urgent Access to Palliative Care Services with Essential Medications in Nepal.
Palliative care is essential for life-threatening illnesses. However, Nepal still faces significant challenges in accessing primary palliative care services, including required medications, particularly in rural areas. This commentary highlights the need for policies and guidelines to ensure equitable access to palliative care with medicines. ⋯ However, these efforts are currently limited in scale. We recommend including essential palliative care medicines in government healthcare policies, establishing training programs for healthcare professionals, and developing comprehensive policies with detailed field research work to meet the growing demand. Addressing these issues will significantly improve the quality of life for palliative care patients in Nepal.
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Background: Palliative PLUS (PP) at the Minneapolis Veterans Affairs Health Care System (MVAHCS) is an interdisciplinary team that seeks to improve veteran access to palliative and hospice resources. Palliative care pharmacists were incorporated to increase patient access to palliative specialties. Objective: To identify and categorize pharmacist interventions within an outpatient PP team at the MVAHCS. ⋯ Of those interventions, 29 (51.8%) were direct interventions and 27 (48.2%) were curbside consults. Most interventions involved medication counseling and medication adherence. Conclusion: Pharmacists made an impact on the PP team through direct patient interventions involving medication counseling and aided the interdisciplinary team by facilitating patient medication adherence.
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J Pain Palliat Care Pharmacother · Jun 2024
Frequency of Myoclonus and its Countermeasures in Terminally Ill Patients with Cancer: A Single-Center Retrospective Study.
Myoclonus is a relatively rare involuntary movement that is often observed in palliative care settings and that can cause patient distress. The purpose of this study is to investigate the occurrence of myoclonus and countermeasures against it in terminally ill patients with cancer diagnosed by palliative care specialists at Komaki City Hospital, Japan. We retrospectively reviewed patients with terminal cancer who received palliative care consultations between January 2018 and May 2019 and who were diagnosed with myoclonus by palliative care specialists, using electronic medical records. ⋯ Median age was 71 (range, 43-88) years; median time from onset of myoclonus to death was 8 days (range, 0-56); opioid usage was present in 39 patients (morphine, oxycodone, and fentanyl: n = 6, 21, and 12, respectively); and median oral morphine equivalent at onset of myoclonus was 60 mg (range, 12-336 mg). Myoclonus treatment was administered to 21 patients (opioid dose reduction, opioid switching, and others: n = 14, 3, and 4, respectively). Myoclonus is a common complication in patients with terminal cancer.
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Scand J Prim Health Care · Jun 2024
Put on the sidelines of palliative care: a qualitative study of important barriers to GPs' participation in palliative care and guideline implementation in Norway.
Demographic changes, the evolvement of modern medicine and new treatments for severe diseases, increase the need for palliative care services. Palliative care includes all patients with life-limiting conditions, irrespective of diagnosis. In Norway, palliative care rests on a decentralised model where patient care can be delivered close to the patient's home, and the Norwegian guideline for palliative care describes a model of care resting on extensive collaboration. Previous research suggests that this guideline is not well implemented among general practitioners (GPs). In this study, we aim to investigate barriers to GPs' participation in palliative care and implementation of the guideline. ⋯ Significant structural and individual barriers to GPs' participation in palliative care exist, which hamper the implementation of the guideline. GPs should be involved as stakeholders when guidelines involving them are created. Introduction of new professionals in primary care needs to be actively managed to avoid inappropriate collaborative practices. Continuity of the GP-patient relationship must be maintained throughout severe illness and at end-of-life.