Journal of palliative medicine
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Cancer patients with advanced disease who have exhausted most treatment options are often offered participation in Phase I clinical trials. To date, studies that assess the benefits of palliative care provided concurrently in Phase I clinical trial settings are lacking. The overall purpose of this study was to test the feasibility of a palliative care intervention administered concurrently to cancer patients receiving treatment in a Phase I clinical trial. ⋯ Concurrent palliative care is feasible for cancer patients treated in Phase I clinical trial settings. A large, multisite randomized controlled trial based on this pilot will be launched to test the efficacy of the intervention in this understudied cancer population.
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Missed opportunities to train medical students in generalist palliative care during core clerkships.
To improve the quality of care for dying patients, experts have called for all clinicians to be able to provide a generalist level of palliative care. Core clinical clerkships provide an opportunity to incorporate palliative care training to address the lack of required palliative care rotations at most U.S. medical schools. ⋯ At an institution without a required palliative care rotation, third-year medical students rarely or never care for patients who die during core clerkships, and when they do, their teams do not debrief or reflect on these experiences. Clinical faculty, including palliative care consultants, can address missed opportunities for palliative care training during core clerkships by augmenting and routinely debriefing students' experiences giving bad news and caring for dying patients.
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Evidence suggests nonelderly adults with cancer are likely to receive aggressive treatment in their last month of life and less likely to receive hospice and/or palliative services. Young adults with cancer (18-39 years) are a unique population, and little is known about the characteristics of their end-of-life care trajectories when they die in the hospital. ⋯ Findings suggest palliative care was initiated late in the care trajectory for young adults with cancer who died in the hospital. This study highlights the need for further inquiry into end-of-life care for young adults with cancer so that interventions can be developed to meet the physical, emotional, social, and spiritual needs of this unique group of patients, their families, and friends.