Articles: caregivers.
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J Pain Symptom Manage · Jun 2021
Spanish Adaptation of the Pediatric Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale for Children, Teens, and Caregivers.
There are no validated Spanish tools to assess symptom burden in pediatric cancer. The Pediatric Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale (Pediatric-MSAS) is an English valid multidimensional and comprehensive instrument. ⋯ Pediatric-MSAS-Spanish is feasible and reliable for assessing symptom burden in children with cancer. Validity of MSAS-Caregiver and MSAS-Teen was largely supported. Further work on MSAS-Child is warranted.
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With the introduction of New South Wales Ambulance Authorised Palliative Care Plans within a metropolitan palliative care service, the perspectives of patients, caregivers and clinicians and their understandings of the processes involved in completing the Plans were investigated. ⋯ The Ambulance Palliative Care Plans are a complex intervention that are sometimes misunderstood by patients, particularly those who are very unwell or who have little prognostic awareness. Clinicians perceive the major benefit to be avoidance of admission to the emergency department.
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Caring for a person with dementia predisposes informal carers (carers) to mental and physical disability. Carers tend to focus on the needs of the person with dementia and have difficulties expressing their own needs for support. No instrument has yet been developed to directly assess carers' support needs. The aim of this study is to clarify the main categories of carers' support needs to inform future development of an instrument to assess carers' support needs. ⋯ Carers have support needs in common regardless of the relation to the person with dementia. Carers tend to focus on the needs of the person with dementia, thus not knowing their own needs. The four main categories clarified in this study may inform the foundation of developing an instrument to facilitate dialogue between carers and professionals with the purpose of assessing carers' support needs.
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ED referral of older adults on the initiative of their family or paid live-in caregiver is common but not previously studied. ⋯ ED referral of older adults from the community by laymen who know the patient well (family or caregiver) is non-inferior to a referral by their PCP. ED physicians should regard non-physician ED presentations as seriously as a referral by a physician, pending confirmation in future studies.