Journal of palliative medicine
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Observational Study
Mindfulness-Based Compassion Training for Health Professionals Providing End-of-Life Care: Impact, Feasibility, and Acceptability.
Background: Health professionals who care for patients and their families at the end of life (EOL) may experience gratitude, and enhanced spirituality and meaning in life, yet they are also at increased risk of psychological distress, compassion fatigue, and occupational burnout given the stressors they encounter in their work. Objectives: This research evaluated the feasibility and acceptability of a novel six-week mindfulness-based compassion training intervention, which was tailored to health professionals involved in EOL care ("MBCT4HP"), and explored its impact on levels of psychological distress, compassion fatigue, compassion satisfaction, occupational burnout, self-compassion, and mindfulness. Design: We adopted an observational, repeated measures pilot study. ⋯ Results: Participants reported that the sessions were useful, relevant, easy to understand, and that they gave them sufficient knowledge to implement the strategies learned. Levels of anxiety, compassion fatigue (burnout only), and emotional exhaustion decreased over time with some decay in effects at follow up, and levels of compassion satisfaction and self-compassion increased with time. Conclusions: The intervention was feasible and acceptable to health professionals involved in EOL care and had a positive impact on levels of anxiety, compassion fatigue (burnout), emotional exhaustion, compassion satisfaction, and self-compassion.
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Background: There have been few studies evaluating the costs of palliative care (PC) in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), especially for patients with cancer. Objectives: The objective of this study was to identify the sociodemographic and clinical variables that could explain the cost per day of PC for cancer in Brazil. Methods: This was a retrospective cost analysis of PC at a quaternary cancer center in São Paulo, Brazil, between January 2010 and December 2013. ⋯ Multivariate analysis revealed that the drivers of cost per day were Karnofsky performance status, the number of hospital admissions, referral to PC, and place of death. Place of death had the greatest impact on the cost per day; death in a hospital and in hospice care increased the mean cost per day by $1.56 and $1.83, respectively. Conclusion: To allocate resources effectively, PC centers in LMICs should emphasize early enrollment of patients at PC outpatient clinics, to avoid hospital readmission, as well as advance planning of the place of death.
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Background: Lack of consistency in palliative care language can serve as barriers when designing, delivering, and accessing high-quality palliative care services. Objective: To develop a consensus-driven and evidence-based palliative care glossary for the Health Standards Organization Palliative Care Services National Standard of Canada (CAN/HSO 13001:2020). Design: Content analysis of the Palliative Care Services standard was used to refine a list of terms. ⋯ Two meetings of consultation based on the modified Delphi approach took place among a working committee consisting of 12 health care providers, administrators, academics, and patient/family representatives. Results: Palliative approach to care, quality of life, pain and symptom management, caregivers, palliative care, life-limiting illness, and serious illness were defined by modification/adoption of existing definitions. Conclusion: A glossary of key palliative care terms was developed and included in the HSO Palliative Care Services standard, which will facilitate communication using consistent language across care settings.