Palliative medicine
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Palliative medicine · Sep 2019
ReviewPatient and carer involvement in palliative care research: An integrative qualitative evidence synthesis review.
Patient/carer involvement in palliative care research has been reported as complex, difficult and less advanced compared to other areas of health and social care research. There is seemingly limited evidence on impact and effectiveness. ⋯ Evidence identified suggests that involvement in palliative care research is challenging, but not dissimilar to that elsewhere. The facilitators and barriers identified relate mainly to the conduct of researchers at an individual level; in particular, there exists a reluctance among professionals to undertake involvement, and myths still perpetuate that patients/carers do not want to be involved. A developed infrastructure, more involvement-friendly organisational cultures and a strengthening of the evidence base would also be beneficial.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 2019
How many older adults receive drugs of questionable clinical benefit near the end of life? A cohort study.
The high burden of disease-oriented drugs among older adults with limited life expectancy raises important questions about the potential futility of care. ⋯ A substantial share of older persons with life-limiting diseases receive drugs of questionable clinical benefit during their last months of life. Adequate training, guidance and resources are needed to rationalize and deprescribe drug treatments for older adults near the end of life.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 2019
The incidence and prevalence of delirium across palliative care settings: A systematic review.
Delirium is a common and distressing neurocognitive condition that frequently affects patients in palliative care settings and is often underdiagnosed. ⋯ Delirium is prevalent across all palliative care settings, with one-third of patients delirious at the time of admission to inpatient palliative care. Study heterogeneity limits meta-analyses and highlights the future need for rigorous studies.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 2019
Robotic technology for palliative and supportive care: Strengths, weaknesses, opportunities and threats.
Medical robots are increasingly used for a variety of applications in healthcare. Robots have mainly been used to support surgical procedures, and for a variety of assistive uses in dementia and elderly care. To date, there has been limited debate about the potential opportunities and risks of robotics in other areas of palliative, supportive and end-of-life care. ⋯ Robotics could have a number of potential applications in palliative, supportive and end-of-life care. Future work should evaluate the health-related, economic, societal and ethical implications of using this technology. There is a need for collaborative research to establish use-cases and inform policy, to ensure the appropriate use (or non-use) of robots for people with serious illness.
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Palliative medicine · Sep 2019
Family members' experiences of assisted dying: A systematic literature review with thematic synthesis.
Families' experiences of assisted dying are under-investigated and families are rarely considered in clinical guidelines concerning assisted dying. ⋯ Our data confirm that families across all jurisdictions are involved in assisted suicide decision and enactment. Family needs are under-researched, and clinical guidelines should incorporate recommendations about how to consider family needs and how to provide them with evidence-based tailored interventions.