Articles: palliative-care.
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Nowadays, more people seem to die in hospitals or other establishments than in their own homes. The following paper reports on 50 consecutive cases of death that occurred in a clinic of internal medicine. The analysis concentrated on the circumstances, the symptoms and the treatment of the patients during the 12 h. preceding and immediately before death as well as on the opinion of the relatives and the attending staff. ⋯ So we should sometimes question ourselves about the sense and the need of certain nursing interventions. We should spend more time during our medical training on the question of palliative care and on the problem of the relationship of doctors to death and to the dying. We feel that establishing a "science of death" or a segregation of the dying in specialized institutions makes no sense.
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Terminal restlessness is a variant of delirium observed in some patients in their last days of life. Readily reversible causes of restlessness should be identified and treated. Benzodiazepines give effective palliation of this condition, and, unlike haloperidol and the phenothiazines, do not exacerbate the existing tendency to myoclonus and convulsions.
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Multicenter Study
Family members' care expectations, care perceptions, and satisfaction with advanced cancer care: results of a multi-site pilot study.
Psychometric properties of assessment tools designed for use with English-speaking family members of advanced cancer patients in different care settings and different geographic locations were evaluated in this study. The robustness of the theoretical framework guiding the study and the factors identified with care satisfaction were also tested. Seventy-two family members drawn equally from medical hospital units, palliative care units, and home care programs in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba participated. ⋯ Family members of patients who had been diagnosed for longer than two years had more positive perceptions of palliative care than did family members of patients diagnosed for less than two years (p = 0.05). Older family members reported better family functioning than younger family members (p < 0.001). Spouses reported less discrepancy between care expectations and perceptions than did other relatives (p < 0.05).