Journal of pain and symptom management
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Feb 2025
"Mr. Smith Has No Mealtimes": Minimal Comfort Feeding for Patients with Advanced Dementia.
While Comfort Feeding Only is appropriate for patients with advanced dementia, its emphasis on assiduous hand-feeding that may prolong life for years fails to accommodate the preferences of those who do not want to continue living with this illness. Some have proposed advance directives to completely halt the provision of oral nutrition and hydration once a person has reached an advanced stage of dementia. ⋯ Rather than offering food and liquids proactively as with Comfort Feeding Only, caregivers provide nutrition and hydration only in response to signs of hunger and thirst. While further study is required to define and negotiate challenges in operationalizing this approach, MCF provides a framework that resolves competing ethical and clinical considerations in caring for those with advanced dementia.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Feb 2025
Impact of Diagnosis Nondisclosure on Quality of Dying in Cancer Patients: A Bereavement Study.
Patients should be optimally informed about their illness for patients' autonomy and shared decision-making. However, diagnosis nondisclosure to patients is traditionally widespread in Japanese culture with family-oriented autonomy. There is insufficient research on quality of death (QOD) and quality of care (QOC) among patients who are not told their diagnosis. ⋯ We demonstrated that overall QOD and QOC in decedents with cancer were significantly higher in decedents with explicit cancer diagnoses. Furthermore, bereaved family members' outcomes were better among the family members of decedents with an explicit cancer diagnosis.