Articles: palliative-care.
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Introduction: This study aimed to describe the patterns of palliative intent treatment and/or palliative care (PC) delivery among a population-based sample of individuals diagnosed with advanced nonsmall cell lung cancer (NSCLC) or advanced melanoma. Methods: Data from 655 advanced-stage melanoma patients and 2688 advanced-stage NSCLC patients included in the National Cancer Institute's 2017/2018 Patterns of Care study were analyzed. Bivariate and multivariate logistic regression analyses examined factors associated with (1) receipt of PC (including palliative surgery, radiation, and/or systemic therapy after cancer diagnosis, and PC consultations); and (2) timing from diagnosis to receipt of PC. ⋯ For NSCLC, stage 4 (vs. stage 3) and a diagnosis of depression or psychosocial distress within three months of diagnosis were significantly associated with receipt of PC and receipt within three months of diagnosis. Conclusion: Study findings indicate that those with advanced-stage cancer or who report distress are more likely to receive palliative intent treatment and/or PC. Given that individuals with advanced cancers are living longer and often experience long-lasting symptoms, it is critical to identify and overcome barriers for broadly delivering comprehensive palliative and supportive care.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Mar 2024
Effects of primary care-led, integrated palliative care for Medicare patients in a value-based model.
Faced with a projected shortage of specialized palliative care physicians, scalable palliative solutions are required to better meet the aging population's needs. ⋯ A primary care-led, integrated approach of delivering palliative care within a full-risk model can be an effective care delivery mechanism to meet the healthcare needs of an aging population by impacting patient outcomes and reducing avoidable utilization and cost at the end of life. These findings demonstrate that PCPs in a scaled, full-risk model can simultaneously improve care for patients while reducing costs to the healthcare system.
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Palliative medicine · Mar 2024
How palliative care professionals develop coping competence through their career: A grounded theory.
Palliative care professionals face emotional challenges when caring for patients with serious advanced diseases. Coping skills are essential for working in palliative care. Several types of coping strategies are mentioned in the literature as protective. However, little is known about how coping skills are developed throughout a professional career. ⋯ The explicative model presents a pathway for personal and professional growth, by accumulating strategies that modulate emotional responses and encourage an ongoing passion for work.
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Background: It is essential to establish both the appropriateness of palliative care (PC) and the prognosis in daily clinical practice to guide decision making in the management of older people with multiple advanced chronic diseases. Objectives: We assessed patients who were appropriate for PC using the NECPAL tool in a hospitalized older population and then we investigated its predictive validity on one-year mortality compared with the multidimensional prognostic index (MPI), a validated geriatric prognostic tool. Design: Prospective cohort study. ⋯ MPI showed a better predictive power than NECPAL (area under the curve [AUC] 0.85 vs. 0.75, p = 0.030). After the exclusion of "Comorbidity: ≥2 concurrent diseases" item from NECPAL, its AUC increased to 0.78 with no statistically significant differences from MPI (p = 0.122). Conclusions: NECPAL is useful to identify the appropriateness of PC in hospitalized older adults, also allowing to predict long-term mortality with a performance similar to that of a validated geriatric prognostic tool.
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Pediatric palliative transport (PPT) is the practice of offering critically and terminally ill children requiring life-sustaining measures the opportunity to be discharged from the hospital to home or a hospice facility for end-of-life care. Although studies have shown PPT to favorably affect both children and their families, limited research exists on the perspectives of health care practitioners. ⋯ Pediatric palliative transport is considered a feasible, valuable, and critical end-of-life intervention. The value that PPT has brought to participating families warrants continued investment in the intervention's standardization and enhancement.