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Showing 1 - 17 of 17 matches in All Departments
This new edition provides the essential clinical guidance both for those embarking upon a career in palliative medicine and for those already established in the field. A team of international experts here distil what every practitioner needs to know into a practical and reliable resource.
Nutrition, appetite, and involuntary weight loss are issues that
affect a large number of cancer patients and cancer survivors.
Aspects such as symptom management, behavioural modification,
exercise and medication are all important aspects of cancer care,
but nutritional issues at the end of life can be accompanied by
contentious ethical factors as well as religious and cultural
influences that need to be addressed by health professionals. This
book enables physicians, nurses and also dieticians to better
discuss these complex issues with patients and their families.
The rapidly evolving field of Palliative Care focuses on the management of phenomena that produce discomfort and that undermine the quality of life of patients with incurable medical disorders. The interdisciplinary clinical purview includes those factors - physical, psychological, social, and spiritual - that contribute to suffering, undermine the quality of life, and prevent a death with comfort and dignity. Palliative Care is a fundamental part of clinical practice, the "parallel universe" to therapies directed at cure or prolongation of life. All clinicians who treat patients with chronic life threatening diseases are engaged in palliative care, continually attempting to manage complex symptomatology and functional disturbances. The scientific foundation of palliative care is advancing, and similarly, methods are needed to highlight, for practioners at the bedside, the findings of empirical research. Topics in Palliative Care Series is divided into sections that address a range of issues. Addressing aspects of sumptom control, psyshocsoical functioning, spiritual or existential concerns, ethics, and other topics, the chapters in each section review the given area and focus on a small number of salient issues for analysis. The authors present and evaluate existing data, provide a context drawn from clinical and research settings, and integrate knowledge in a manner that is both practical and readable. The specific topics covered in Volume 5 are Cultural issues in Palliative Care, Palliative Care in Geriatrics, Communication Issues in Palliative Care, Outcomes Research in Palliative Care, Opiod Tolerance; Reality of Myth?, and Pain and other symptoms: Treatment Challenges.
Palliative Care Consultations in Haemato-oncology is the first book in a new international, multi-contributed series aimed at providing practical, clinical guidance on how to deal with difficult symptoms related to specific cancer sites. Patients with haematological malignancy often undergo the most rigorous treatments, usually requiring long inpatient stays at tertiary referral centres far removed from friends, families and everyday life. The treatment for some malignancies is palliative, although aggressive, from diagnosis and there can be a number of difficult symptom-control problems all of which are covered in this book. This volume draws on the expertise of the haematologist who is vital if the patient is to have optimal care and provides practical advice in an easily accessible form so that the book can be read and referred to on the ward, or before a domiciliary visit. Specialists in palliative care and oncology settings, working in the acute sector and in hospices, will find this book invaluable. It will also appeal to consultants as well as specialist registrars, clinical nurse specialists and nurse practitioners in palliative care, oncology and haematology. ABOUT THE PALLIATIVE CARE CONSULTATIONS SERIES: This series is aimed at those individuals working in a acute hospital cancer centre and/or tertiary referral centre. They are designed to give the busy clinician advice on clinical problems which may be relatively rarely encountered or very common but which are often very difficult to manage. The volumes are site specific and every volume encompasses a review of the current oncological or haemato-oncological management of advanced disease with symptom control advice. The aim of these volumes is to give excellent medical symptom control advice, but also to put the medical advice in the context of palliative care. The books will also be of use and interest to other professions, with the focus on giving first-rate medical help.
Currently, there is no comprehensive source of information available to non-specialist physicians and nurses providing end-of-life care for advanced cancer patients at a level between specialist oncology texts and nursing texts. Two eminent physicians from one of the world's foremost cancer centers have drawn together a remarkable team to provide a handbook which covers the full range of problems non-specialists will encounter. This highly accessible text covers general principles in oncology, each of the primary tumors, and management of specific symptoms and syndromes.
Patients with advanced cancer may develop a number of clinical complications related to tumor progression or a variety of aggressive treatments. The majority of these patients are elderly, often with multiple co-morbidities that require appropriate assessment and management. In the palliative stage of their disease, patients undergo a progressive transition from active acute care to community-based hospice care. This transition requires modification in the diagnostic tests, monitoring procedures and pharmacological treatments to adjust them to the palliative and short-term nature of the care. Internal Medicine Issues in Palliative Cancer Care looks at internal medicine through a prognosis-based framework and provides a practical approach to maximizing comfort and quality of life while minimizing aggressive investigations and therapies for patients with life-limiting disease. Forty-six common internal medicine conditions are organized into nine clinical categories: pulmonary, cardiovascular, nephrologic and metabolic, gastrointestinal, hematologic, infectious, endocrine, rheumatologic, and neuro-psychiatric. This evidence-based resource is ideal for educating clinicians delivering palliative care to cancer patients in acute care facilities about complex internal medicine problems, decision-making regarding diagnostics and therapeutics which require a good understanding of state-of-the-art internal medicine and palliative care principles.
This is the fourth book in a series devoted to research and practice in palliative care. This rapidly evolving field focuses on the management of phenomena that produce discomfort and undermine the quality of life of patients with incurable medical disorders. To highlight the diversity in this field, each volume is divided into sections that address a range of issues. Various sections discuss aspects of symptom control, psychosocial functioning, spiritual orr existential concerns, ethics, and other topics. The four sections in this volume are; Survival Estimation in Palliative Care, Education and Training in Palliative Care, Procoagulant and Anticoagulant Therapy in Palliative Care, and Issues in the Assessment and Management of Common Symptoms. The authors present and evaluate existing data, provide a context drawn from both the clinic and research, and integrate knowledge in a manner that is both practical and readable.
50 Studies Every Palliative Care Doctor Should Know presents key studies that have shaped the practice of palliative medicine. Selected using a rigorous methodology, the studies cover topics including: palliative care, symptom assessment and management, psychosocial aspects of care and communication, and end-of-life care. For each study, a concise summary is presented with an emphasis on the results and limitations of the study, and its implications for practice. An illustrative clinical case concludes each review, followed by brief information on other relevant studies. This book is a must-read for health care professionals and anyone who wants to learn more about the data behind clinical practice.
The Oxford American Handbook of Hospice and Palliative Medicine and Supportive Care is an easily-navigable source of information about the day-to-day management of patients requiring palliative and hospice care. The table of contents follows the core curriculum of the American Board of Hospice and Palliative Medicine, thus meeting the educational and clinical information needs of students, residents, fellows, and nurse practitioners. Succinct, evidence-based, topically-focused content is supplemented by extensive tables, algorithms, and clinical pearls. This edition includes new sections on grief and bereavement, medical marijuana, and physician assisted suicide, and has been updated throughout to incorporate National Consensus Project for Quality Palliative Care Clinical Practice Guidelines.
This is the third book in a new international, multi-contributed
series aimed at providing practical, clinical guidance on how to
deal with difficult symptoms related to specific cancer sites.
There are few more distressing problems for patients and families
than the development of a primary or secondary brain tumor.
Treatment is often palliative, though intensive, from the start.
Little firm evidence exists to guide the physician in caring for
patients with seizures refractory to standard treatment. Most of
the work is based on case reports or personal experience. This book
draws the information together in an easily accessible form so that
the book can be read and referred to on the ward, or before a
domiciliary visit.
This is the second book in a new international, multi-contributed
series aimed at providing practical, clinical guidance on how to
deal with difficult symptoms related to specific cancer sites. In
gynaecology there are a number of symptoms which cause great
distress to the individual and their families, and perplexity to
the physicians and nurses caring for them. This volume covers the
management of incurable disease for each of the most common cancers
followed by a review of the most difficult symptoms that are
encountered in this tumor group. Contributors provide scientific
background to symptom-control chapters, with an indication of the
sources and evidence for their advice.
Gastrointestinal symptoms such as anorexia-cachexia, chronic nausea, vomiting and bowel obstruction are highly distressing for patients with advanced cancer. Approximately one in three adults will be diagnosed with cancer in their lives and approximately fifty per cent of them will die because of malignancy. More than eighty per cent of patients who die of cancer will present severe gastrointestinal symptoms before death. This book presents detailed, evidence-based information on each of the gastrointestinal symptoms for a multi-disciplinary audience. Comprehensive guidelines have been included on how to assess the patient, in order to ensure effective treatment, in which prescribing is tailored to the cause of the symptoms and to the patient's individual needs. The book recognises that the aim of good cancer management and palliative care is to assess, diagnose, manage and treat these symptoms to ensure best quality of life. Aimed primarily at hospice and palliative care specialists, medical, radiation and surgical oncologists and selected family physicians and internists who have an interest in cancer care. The book will also appeal to oncology and academic nurses, nutritionists as well as clinical psychologists with an interest in oncology and/or palliative care. ALSO PUBLISHED BY OXFORD UNIVERSITY PRESS Cancer Pain Management - a comprehensive approach Edited by Karen H Simpson & Keith Budd Integrated Cancer Care - holistic, complementary and creative approaches Edited by Jennifer Barraclough The Syringe Driver: continuous subcutaneous infusions in palliative care Andrew Dickman, Clare Littlewood & Jim Varga
Palliative care is rapidly evolving as a multidimensional therapeutic model devoted to improving the quality of life of all patients with life-threatening illness. Symptom control, management of psychosocial and spiritual concerns, decision making consistent with values and goals, and care of the imminently dying that is appropriate and sensitive to the unique needs of the individual and family - these are among the critical issues addressed through palliative care. As this discipline has evolved, the need for research in all these areas has become widely acknowledged. Issues in Palliative Care Research describes both the progress that already has been made in the investigation of these issues and the methodological elements that must be addressed in future studies. The perspective is broad and the overriding goal is to inform about the state of the art in these rapidly evolving areas of research.
Palliative care is a rapidly evolving field focused on the
management of problems that undermine the quality of life of
patients with progressive incurable medical disorders. It is
fundamentally concerned with all factors- physical, psychological,
social, and spiritual- that contribute to suffering, and prevent a
death with comfort and dignity. Palliative care is a fundamental
aspect to good clinical practice, the "parallel universe" to
therapies directed at cure or prolongation of life. All clinicians
who treat patients with chronic life-threatening diseases are
engaged in providing palliative care, continually attempting to
manage complex symptomatology and functional disturbances.
The rapidly evolving field of Palliative Care focuses on the
management of phenomena that produce discomfort and that undermine
the quality of life of patients with incurable medical disorders.
The interdisciplinary clinical purview includes those factors -
physical, psychological, social, and spiritual - that contribute to
suffering, undermine quality of life, and prevent a death with
comfort and dignity. Palliative Care is a fundamental part of
clinical practice, the "parallel universe" to therapies directed at
cure or prolongation of life. All clinicians who treat patients
with chronic life-threatening diseases are ingaged in palliative
care, continually attempting to manage complex symptomatology and
functional disturbances.
Palliative care, which focuses on the management of phenomena that produce discomfort and otherwise undermine the quality of life of patients with incurable medical disorders, is a clinical specialty that is just beginning to define itself in the United States. This first volume in the Supportive Care Medicine series will discuss palliative care topics, such as pharmacotherapy of pain, adjustments to cancer, management of delirium, and gastrointestinal disorders.
Palliative and end of life care are concerned with the physical,
social, psychological and spiritual care of people with advanced
disease. It currently has a poorly developed research base, but the
need to improve this is increasingly recognised. One of the reasons
for the lack of research - and the variable quality of the research
that is undertaken - is the difficulty of conducting research with
very ill and bereaved people. Standard and well-established
research methods may need to be adapted to work in this context.
This means that existing research methods textbooks may be of
limited use to palliative care practitioners seeking to do research
for the first time, or to more experienced researchers wanting to
apply their knowledge in palliative care settings.
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