194,593 results on '"PALLIATIVE CARE"'
Search Results
2. SPICT tool among intubated elderly patients at emergency department
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Tangpaisarn, Thanat, Prajammuang, Ponpich, Khemtong, Sukanya, Phungoen, Pariwat, and Thatphet, Phraewa
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- 2024
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3. Factors Associated With Palliative Care Birth Planning at a Pediatric Hospital
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Richner, Gwendolyn J., Kelly-Langen, Catherine A., Allen, Stephanie S., Brown, Miraides F., Grossoehme, Daniel H., and Friebert, Sarah
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- 2024
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4. Exploring the role of psychedelic-assisted therapy in enhancing spirituality and mystical experiences in patients with life-threatening illnesses: A systematic review
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Ferreira, Ana Esteves and Reis-Pina, Paulo
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- 2025
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5. Development and pilot testing of a theory-driven and evidence-based advance care planning training programme for nurses in acute care settings
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Chan, Carmen WH., Ng, Nancy HY., Chan, Helen YL., Choi, Kai Chow, Chow, Ka Ming, Kwan, Cecilia WM., Robinson, Jackie, and Tse, Mankei
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- 2025
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6. Understanding European patterns of deprescribing antithrombotic medication during end-of-life care in patients with cancer
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Martens, E.S.L., Becker, D., Abele, C., Abbel, D., Achterberg, W.P., Bax, J.J., Bertoletti, L., Edwards, M.E., Font, C., Gava, A., Goedegebuur, J., Højen, A.A., Huisman, M.V., Kruip, M.J.H.A., Mahé, I., Mooijaart, S.P., Pearson, M., Seddon, K., Szmit, S., Noble, S.I.R., Klok, F.A., and Konstantinides, S.V.
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- 2025
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7. Use of Essential Medicines for Pain Relief and Palliative Care: A Global Consensus Process
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Pastrana, Tania, De Lima, Liliana, Dudgeon, Deborah, Voeuk, Anna, Ahmed, Ebtesam, and Radbruch, Lukas
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- 2025
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8. Variation in Palliative Care Program Performance for Patients With Metastatic Cancer
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Hua, May, Guo, Ling, Ing, Caleb, Wang, Shuang, and Morrison, R. Sean
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- 2025
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9. Recommendations for Psychosocial Support for Long-Distance Caregivers of Terminally Ill Patients
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Herbst, Franziska A., Schneider, Nils, and Stiel, Stephanie
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- 2025
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10. Palliative Care in Hematology: A Systematic Review of the Components, Effectiveness, and Implementation
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Hochrath, Sophie, Dhollander, Naomi, Deliens, Luc, Schots, Rik, Daenen, Frederick, Kerre, Tessa, Beernaert, Kim, and Pardon, Koen
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- 2025
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11. Effectiveness of music therapy, aromatherapy, and massage therapy on patients in palliative care with end-of-life needs: A systematic review
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Jodie, Freeman, Anna, Klingele, and Ursula, Wolf
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- 2025
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12. Understanding Nonpharmacologic Palliative Care for People With Serious COPD: The Individual and Organizational Perspective
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Marsaa, Kristoffer, Guldin, Mai-Britt, Marques, Alda, Pinnock, Hilary, and Janssen, Daisy J.A.
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- 2025
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13. Does Reframing Do Not Resuscitate to Beneficial Care Only Increase Acceptance of No-CPR Orders?
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Campbell, Julie L. and Piscitello, Gina M.
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- 2025
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14. Causes of Death Among Patients Supported by Extracorporeal Membrane Oxygenation
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Lerner, Renata P., Mohamed, Amira, Ilg, Annette, Seethala, Raghu R., Witkin, Alison, Crowley, Jerome, Carlese, Anthony, Gong, Michelle Ng, Aimlin, Iris, Chen, Jen-Ting, Furfaro, David, O’Gara, Brian, Gardner, Ryan, Butera, Malorie, Shaefi, Shahzad, Knox, Daniel, Gutteridge, Daniel, Horner, Christie, Manasia, Anthony, Kavi, Nidhi, Rahmanian, Marjan, and Moskowitz, Ari
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- 2024
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15. Palliative Electroconvulsive Therapy: A Descriptive Cohort Study
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Robbins-Welty, Gregg A., Slauer, Ryan D., Brown, Madeline M., Nakatani, Morgan M., Shalev, Dan, and Feigal, Jacob
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- 2024
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16. Language Justice as Health Equity in Palliative Care: A Scoping Review
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Bigger, Sharon E., Obregon, Daniela, Keinath, Christiana, and Doyon, Katherine
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- 2024
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17. End of life care in chronic limb threatening ischemia: A retrospective cohort study
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Davies, Henry, Laing, Patrick, Safdar, Nawaz Z., Tezcan, Selin, Kwan, Jing-Yi, Hussain, Henna, Chand, Chandini, Abdulrauf, Khalil, Sood, Mehak, Pazvakavambwa, Hannah, Aziz, Rohan, Stocco, Fabio, Dua, Anahita, Russell, David, and Scott, D. Julian A.
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- 2024
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18. The lived experience of renal cachexia: An interpretive phenomenological analysis.
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Blair, Carolyn, Shields, Joanne, Mullan, Robert, Johnston, William, Davenport, Andrew, Fouque, Denis, Kalantar-Zadeh, Kamyar, Maxwell, Peter, McKeaveney, Clare, Noble, Helen, Porter, Sam, Seres, David, Slee, Adrian, Swaine, Ian, Witham, Miles, and Reid, Joanne
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Cachexia ,End-stage kidney disease ,Health ,Interpretative phenomenological analysis ,Kidney disease ,Lived experience ,Palliative care ,Qualitative - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Chronic kidney disease is common, affecting up to 13 % of the global population, and is predicted to become the fifth leading cause of life years lost by 2040. Individuals with end-stage kidney disease commonly develop complications such as protein-energy wasting and cachexia which further worsens their prognosis. The syndrome of renal cachexia is poorly understood, under-diagnosed and even if recognised has limited treatment options. OBJECTIVE: To explore the lived experience of renal cachexia for individuals with end-stage kidney disease and the interrelated experiences of their carers. DESIGN: This interpretive phenomenological study was designed to facilitate an in-depth exploration of how patients and carers experience of renal cachexia. To improve and document the quality, transparency, and consistency of patient and public involvement in this study the Guidance for Reporting Involvement of Patients and the Public-Short Format was followed. SETTING: The study was conducted across two nephrology directorates, within two healthcare trusts in the United Kingdom. PARTICIPANTS: Seven participants who met the inclusion criteria were recruited for this study, four patients (three female, one male) and three carers (two male, one female). METHODS: We employed a purposive sampling strategy. Data collection was conducted between July 2022 and December 2023. Interviews were semi-structured, audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim and analysed in six steps by two researchers using interpretive phenomenological analysis. Ethical approval was approved by the Office for Research Ethics Committees Northern Ireland (Reference: 22/NI/0107). RESULTS: Analysis generated six group experiential themes: the lived experience of appetite loss, functional decline and temporal coping, weight loss a visual metaphor of concern, social withdrawal and vulnerability, the emotional toll of eating challenges and psychological strain amidst a lack of information about cachexia. CONCLUSION: This is the first qualitative study exploring the lived experience of renal cachexia for patients and carers. Our study highlights that psycho-social and educational support is urgently needed. Additionally, healthcare professionals need better information provision to help them to recognise and respond to the needs of this population. Further research is required to develop models of holistic support which could help patients and carers cope with the impact of renal cachexia and optimally manage this syndrome within the family unit. REGISTRATION: N/A.
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- 2024
19. Patients Can Administer Mobile Audio Recordings to Increase Knowledge in Advanced Prostate Cancer.
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Kwon, Daniel, Trihy, Lauren, Darvish, Nika, Hearst, Eliza, Sumra, Saffanat, Borno, Hala, Bose, Rohit, Chou, Jonathan, de Kouchkovsky, Ivan, Desai, Arpita, Ekstrand, Brad, Friedlander, Terence, Kaur, Gurleen, Koshkin, Vadim, Nesheiwat, Samantha, Sepucha, Karen, Small, Eric, Aggarwal, Rahul, and Belkora, Jeffrey
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implementation science ,palliative care ,patient education ,patient knowledge ,prostate cancer ,recordings ,shared decision‐making ,Aged ,Humans ,Male ,Appointments and Schedules ,Decision Making ,Docetaxel ,Health Knowledge ,Attitudes ,Practice ,Mobile Applications ,Patient Education as Topic ,Prostatic Neoplasms ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Tape Recording ,Aged ,80 and over - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Consultation audio recordings improve patient decision-making but are underutilized. Patient-administered recording apps on mobile devices may increase access, but implementation has not been evaluated. METHODS: We conducted a single-arm study delivering education, coaching, and reminders for patients to record their appointment using a mobile recording app. Patients had progressive, advanced prostate cancer and an upcoming appointment where the option of docetaxel would be discussed. We used the RE-AIM framework for evaluation. Reach was the proportion of patients who participated. Effectiveness was change in informed decision-making pre- vs. post-appointment. We used a questionnaire evaluating patient knowledge about docetaxel (0%-100% correct) and the decisional conflict scale-informed subscale (0 = feels extremely uninformed to 100 = extremely informed) to compare means using the paired t-test. Adoption was the proportion of providers agreeing to be recorded. Implementation was coordinator adherence to intervention delivery. We conducted semistructured interviews with patients, caregivers, and providers to assess barriers, facilitators, and suggestions for recording implementation. RESULTS: Of 102 patients approached, 50 (49%) patients participated. Mean age was 75 years, 38 (76%) were Non-Hispanic White, and 43 (86%) had telehealth appointments. Knowledge increased from 44.7% to 49.5% (p = 0.019), particularly about palliative care (42% answering correctly to 60%, p = 0.035). Decisional conflict-informed subscale increased from 48.9 to 70.9 (p
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- 2024
20. Differences in code status practice patterns among emergency clinicians working in Japan and the United States
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Numata, Kenji, Fujitani, Shigeki, Funakoshi, Hiraku, Yoshida, Minoru, Nomura, Yu, Tanii, Rimi, Takemura, Narihide, Bowman, Jason, Lakin, Joshua R, Higuchi, Masaya, Liu, Shan W, Kennedy, Maura, Tulsky, James A, Neville, Thanh H, and Ouchi, Kei
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Health Services and Systems ,Health Sciences ,Lung ,Cancer ,Code status communication ,Emergency care ,End -of -life care ,Palliative care ,Nurse practitioner ,International ,End-of-life care ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Psychology and Cognitive Sciences ,Public Health ,Health services and systems - Abstract
ObjectiveThis study aimed to examine self-reported code-status practice patterns among emergency clinicians from Japan and the U.S.MethodsA cross-sectional questionnaire was distributed to emergency clinicians from one academic medical center and four general hospitals in Japan and two academic medical centers in the U.S. The questionnaire was based on a hypothetical case involving a critically ill patient with end-stage lung cancer. The questionnaire items assessed whether respondent clinicians would be likely to pose questions to patients about their preferences for medical procedures and their values and goals.ResultsA total of 176 emergency clinicians from Japan and the U.S participated. After adjusting for participants' backgrounds, emergency clinicians in Japan were less likely to pose procedure-based questions than those in the U.S. Conversely, emergency clinicians in Japan showed a statistically higher likelihood of asking 10 out of 12 value-based questions.ConclusionSignificant differences were found between emergency clinicians in Japan and the U.S. in their reported practices on posing procedure-based and patient value-based questions.Practice implicationsSerious illness communication training based in the U.S. must be adapted to the Japanese context, considering the cultural characteristics and practical responsibilities of Japanese emergency clinicians.
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- 2024
21. Supportive care 2030 movement: towards unifying ambitions for global excellence in supportive cancer care-an international Delphi study.
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Chan, Raymond, Knowles, Reegan, Ashbury, Fredrick, Bowen, Joanne, Chan, Alexandre, Chin, Melissa, Olver, Ian, Taylor, Carolyn, Tinianov, Stacey, Alberti, Paola, Bossi, Paolo, Brito-Dellan, Norman, Cooksley, Tim, Crawford, Gregory, Dixit, Niharika, Fitch, Margaret, Freedman, Jason, Ginex, Pamela, Hart, Nicolas, Hertz, Daniel, Jefford, Michael, Koczwara, Bogda, Naito, Tateaki, Orsey, Andrea, Ruhlmann, Christina, Tsoukalas, Nikolaos, van den Hurk, Corina, Van Sebille, Ysabella, Wardill, Hannah, Scotte, Florian, and Lustberg, Maryam
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Optimal care ,Palliative care ,Supportive care ,Supportive oncology ,Toxicity - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Supportive care to ensure optimal quality of life is an essential component of cancer care and symptom control across the lifespan. Ongoing advances in cancer treatment, increasing toxicity from many novel treatment regimes, and variations in access to care and cancer outcomes across the globe and resource settings present significant challenges for supportive care delivery. To date, no overarching framework has been developed to guide supportive care development worldwide. As an initial step of the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer (MASCC) Supportive Care 2030 Movement, we developed a targeted, unifying set of ambition statements to envision the future of supportive cancer care. METHODS: From September 2022 until June 2023, we used a modified Delphi methodology to develop and attain consensus about ambition statements related to supportive cancer care. Leaders of MASCC Study Groups were invited to participate in an Expert Panel for the first two Delphi rounds (and a preliminary round to suggest potential ambition statements). Patient Advocates then examined and provided input regarding the ambition statements. FINDINGS: Twenty-seven Expert Panelists and 11 Patient Advocates participated. Consensus was attained on 13 ambition statements, with two sub-statements. The ambition statements addressed global standards for guideline development and implementation, coordinated and individualized care, dedicated supportive oncology services, self-management, needs for screening and actions, patient education, behavioral support, financial impact minimization, comprehensive survivorship care, and timely palliative care, reflecting collaboration, coordination and team-based approach across all levels. INTERPRETATION: This study is the first to develop shared ambitions for the future of supportive cancer care on a global level. These ambition statements can facilitate a coordinated, resource-stratified, and person-centered approach and inform research, education, clinical services, and policy efforts. FUNDING: This project received funding support from Prof Raymond Chans NHMRC Investigator Grant (APP1194051).
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- 2024
22. Increasing goals of care conversations in primary care: Study protocol for a cluster randomized, pragmatic, sequential multiple assignment randomized trial.
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Bekelman, David, Giannitrapani, Karleen, Linn, Kristin, Langner, Paula, Sudore, Rebecca, Rabin, Borsika, Lorenz, Karl, Foglia, Marybeth, Glickman, Amanda, Pawlikowski, Scott, Sloan, Marilyn, Gamboa, Raziel, McCaa, Matthew, Hines, Anne, and Walling, Anne
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Advance care planning ,Goals of care conversations ,Implementation science ,Palliative care ,Quality of life ,Sequential multiple assignment randomized trial (SMART) ,Serious illness conversations ,Humans ,Primary Health Care ,United States Department of Veterans Affairs ,Patient Care Planning ,United States ,Communication ,Physician-Patient Relations - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Goals of care conversations explore seriously ill patients values to guide medical decision making and often inform decisions about life sustaining treatments. Ideally, conversations occur before a health crisis between patients and clinicians in the outpatient setting. In the United States Veterans Affairs (VA) healthcare system, most conversations still occur in the inpatient setting. Strategies are needed to improve implementation of outpatient, primary care goals of care conversations. METHODS: We plan a cluster randomized (clinician-level) sequential, multiple assignment randomized trial to evaluate the effectiveness of patient implementation strategies on the outcome of goals of care conversation documentation when delivered in combination with clinician implementation strategies. Across three VA healthcare system sites, we will enroll primary care clinicians with low rates of goals of care conversations and their patients with serious medical illness in the top 10th percentile of risk of hospitalization or death. We will compare the effectiveness of sequences of implementation strategies and explore how patient and site factors modify implementation strategy effects. Finally, we will conduct a mixed-methods evaluation to understand implementation strategy success or failure. The design includes two key innovations: (1) strategies that target both clinicians and patients and (2) sequential strategies with increased intensity for non-responders. CONCLUSION: This study aims to determine the effect of different sequences and combinations of implementation strategies on primary care documentation of goals of care conversations. Study partners, including the VA National Center for Ethics in Health Care and Office of Primary Care, can consider policies based on study findings.
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- 2024
23. Global disparities in cancer supportive care: An international survey.
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Chan, Alexandre, Eng, Lawson, Jiang, Changchuan, Dagsi, Mary, Ke, Yu, Tanay, Mary, Bergerot, Cristiane, Dixit, Niharika, Gutiérrez, Ana, Velazquez, Ana, Islami, Farhad, and Soto-Perez-de-Celis, Enrique
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cancer supportive care ,financial toxicities ,health disparities ,healthcare professionals ,low‐ and middle‐income countries ,social needs ,Humans ,Neoplasms ,Healthcare Disparities ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Female ,Male ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Global Health ,Health Services Accessibility ,Developing Countries ,Middle Aged ,Developed Countries ,Adult ,Palliative Care - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The global cancer burden is rising, particularly in low- and middle-income countries (LMIC), highlighting a critical research gap in understanding disparities in supportive care access. To address this, the Multinational Association of Supportive Care in Cancer (MASCC) Health Disparities Committee initiated a global survey to investigate and delineate these disparities. This study aims to explore and compare supportive care access disparities between LMIC and High-Income Countries (HIC). METHODS: An online cross-sectional survey was conducted among active members of MASCC. Members, representing diverse healthcare professions received email invitations. The survey, available for 3 weeks, comprised sections covering (1) sociodemographic information; (2) clinical service/practice-related disparities in their region/nation; (3) population groups facing disparities within their region or country. Chi-squared or Fishers exact test for cross-sectional analyses, and a multivariable logistic regression model was employed for statistical analysis. RESULTS: A total of 218 active members participated, with one-quarter (26.6%) from LMIC and 18.4% ethnic minorities, timely cancer care (43.7%) and timely supportive care (45.0%) emerged as the most pressing disparities globally. Notably, participants from LMIC underscored cancer drug affordability (56.4%) and supportive care guideline implementation (56.4%) as critical issues. Economically disadvantaged populations were noted as more likely to face disparities by both LMIC and HIC (non-US-based) respondents, while US-based respondents identified racial/ethnic minorities as facing more disparities. CONCLUSION: This global survey reveals significant disparities in cancer supportive care between LMIC and HIC, with a particular emphasis on medication affordability and guideline implementation in LMIC. Addressing these disparities requires targeted intervention, considering specific regional priorities.
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- 2024
24. Best Case/Worst Case-ICU: protocol for a multisite, stepped-wedge, randomised clinical trial of scenario planning to improve communication in the ICU in US trauma centres for older adults with serious injury.
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Stalter, Lily, Hanlon, Bret, Bushaw, Kyle, Kwekkeboom, Kristine, Zelenski, Amy, Fritz, Melanie, Buffington, Anne, Stein, Deborah, Cocanour, Christine, Robles, Anamaria, Jansen, Jan, Brasel, Karen, OConnell, Kathleen, Cipolle, Mark, Ayoung-Chee, Patricia, Morris, Rachel, Gelbard, Rondi, Kozar, Rosemary, Lueckel, Stephanie, and Schwarze, Margaret
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adult intensive & critical care ,clinical trial ,medical ethics ,palliative care ,trauma management ,Aged ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Communication ,Family ,Intensive Care Units ,Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic ,Trauma Centers ,United States ,Wounds and Injuries ,Multicenter Studies as Topic - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Poor communication about serious injury in older adults can lead to treatment that is inconsistent with patient preferences, create conflict and strain healthcare resources. We developed a communication intervention called Best Case/Worst Case-intensive care unit (ICU) that uses daily scenario planning, that is, a narrative description of plausible futures, to support prognostication and facilitate dialogue among patients, their families and the trauma ICU team. This article describes a protocol for a multisite, randomised, stepped-wedge study to test the effectiveness of the intervention on the quality of communication (QOC) in the ICU. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: We will follow all patients aged 50 and older admitted to the trauma ICU for 3 or more days after a serious injury at eight high-volume level 1 trauma centres. We aim to survey one family or like family member per eligible patient 5-7 days following their loved ones admission and clinicians providing care in the trauma ICU. Using a stepped-wedge design, we will use permuted block randomisation to assign the timing for each site to begin implementation of the intervention and routine use of the Best Case/Worst Case-ICU tool. We will use a linear mixed-effects model to test the effect of the tool on family-reported QOC (using the QOC scale) as compared with usual care. Secondary outcomes include the effect of the tool on reducing clinician moral distress (using the Measure of Moral Distress for Healthcare Professionals scale) and patients length of stay in the ICU. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Institutional review board (IRB) approval was granted at the University of Wisconsin, and all study sites ceded review to the primary IRB. We plan to report results in peer-reviewed publications and national meetings. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT05780918.
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- 2024
25. Longitudinal experiences of Canadians receiving compassionate access to psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy.
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de la Salle, Sara, Kettner, Hannes, Thibault Lévesque, Julien, Garel, Nicolas, Dames, Shannon, Patchett-Marble, Ryan, Rej, Soham, Gloeckler, Sara, Erritzoe, David, Carhart-Harris, Robin, and Greenway, Kyle
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Distress ,Palliative care ,Psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy ,Psychedelics ,Adult ,Aged ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Middle Aged ,Anxiety ,Canada ,Compassionate Use Trials ,Depression ,Hallucinogens ,Longitudinal Studies ,North American People ,Prospective Studies ,Psilocybin ,Psychotherapy ,Quality of Life - Abstract
Recent clinical trials have found that the serotonergic psychedelic psilocybin effectively alleviates anxiodepressive symptoms in patients with life-threatening illnesses when given in a supportive environment. These outcomes prompted Canada to establish legal pathways for therapeutic access to psilocybin, coupled with psychological support. Despite over one-hundred Canadians receiving compassionate access since 2020, there has been little examination of these real-world patients. We conducted a prospective longitudinal survey which focused on Canadians who were granted Section 56 exemptions for legal psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy. Surveys assessing various symptom dimensions were conducted at baseline, two weeks following the session (endpoint), and optionally one day post-session. Participant characteristics were examined using descriptive statistics, and paired sample t-tests were used to quantify changes from baseline to the two-week post-treatment endpoint. Eight participants with Section 56 exemptions (four females, Mage = 52.3 years), all with cancer diagnoses, fully completed baseline and endpoint surveys. Significant improvements in anxiety and depression symptoms, pain, fear of COVID-19, quality of life, and spiritual well-being were observed. Attitudes towards death, medical assistance in dying, and desire for hastened death remained unchanged. While most participants found the psilocybin sessions highly meaningful, if challenging, one reported a substantial decrease in well-being due to the experience. These preliminary data are amongst the first to suggest that psilocybin-assisted psychotherapy can produce psychiatric benefits in real-world patients akin to those observed in clinical trials. Limited enrollment and individual reports of negative experiences indicate the need for formal real-world evaluation programs to surveil the ongoing expansion of legal access to psychedelics.
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- 2024
26. Assessing for differences in opioid administration during inpatient end-of-life care for patients with limited English proficiency.
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Curatola, Nicole, Prasad, Priya, Bell, Brieze, Fang, Margaret, and Rambachan, Aksharananda
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Humans ,Terminal Care ,Analgesics ,Opioid ,Retrospective Studies ,Male ,Female ,Limited English Proficiency ,Aged ,Middle Aged ,Inpatients ,Hospitalization ,Palliative Care - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with limited English proficiency (LEP) may have worse health outcomes and differences in processes of care. Language status may particularly affect situations that depend on communication, such as symptom management or end-of-life (EOL) care. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study was to assess whether opioid prescribing and administration differs by English proficiency (EP) status among hospitalized patients receiving EOL care. METHODS: This single-center retrospective study identified all adult patients receiving comfort care on the general medicine service from January 2013 to September 2021. We assessed for differences in the quantity of opioids administered (measured by oral morphine equivalents [OME]) by patient LEP status using multivariable linear regression, controlling for other patient and medical factors. RESULTS: We identified 2652 patients receiving comfort care at our institution during the time period, of whom 1813 (68%) died during the hospitalization. There were no significant differences by LEP status in terms of mean OME per day (LEP received 30.8 fewer OME compared to EP, p = .91) or in the final 24 h before discharge (LEP received 61.7 more OME compared to EP, p = .80). CONCLUSION: LEP was not associated with differences in the amount of opioids received for patients whose EOL management involved standardized order sets for symptom management at our hospital.
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- 2024
27. Nutritional impairment, psychological health and quality of life among older adults with advanced cancer: A secondary analysis of a randomized clinical trial.
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Singhal, Surbhi, Wang, Ying, Qin, Zhaoyang, Peterson, Derick, Dunne, Richard, Culakova, Eva, Hopkins, Judith, Melnyk, Natalia, Onitilo, Adedayo, Targia, Valerie, Mohile, Supriya, and Loh, Kah
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nutritional impairment ,older adults ,psychological health ,quality of life ,Humans ,Quality of Life ,Aged ,Male ,Female ,Neoplasms ,Geriatric Assessment ,Aged ,80 and over ,Nutritional Status ,Mental Health ,Nutrition Assessment ,Malnutrition ,Palliative Care ,Depression - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Nutritional impairment is associated with treatment toxicity and worse overall survival in patients with cancer. We aimed to (1) evaluate the association of nutritional impairment with psychological health and quality of life (QOL) and (2) examine which measures of nutrition had the strongest association with psychological health and QOL among older adults receiving cancer treatment with palliative intent. METHODS: This secondary analysis was performed on baseline data from a nationwide cluster randomized clinical trial (ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT02107443; PI: Mohile). Adults age ≥70 with advanced cancer and ≥1 geriatric assessment (GA) impairment were enrolled from 2014 to 2017. In line with geriatric oncology standards, we defined nutritional impairment as Mini Nutritional Assessment Short Form (MNA-SF) ≤11, body mass index (BMI) 10% involuntary weight loss in the past 6 months. We conducted multivariable linear regressions to evaluate the association of nutritional impairment with each measure of psychological health and QOL: Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS-15, range 0-15), Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7, range 0-21), NCCN Distress Thermometer (NCCN DT, range 0-10), and Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (FACT-G, range 0-108). Analyses were adjusted for patient demographics, clinical characteristics, and GA. RESULTS: Among 541 patients, the mean age was 77 (range 70-96) and 60% had nutritional impairment. Mean baseline scores: GDS-15 3.1 (SD 2.7), GAD-7 2.9 (SD 4.0), NCCN DT 2.9 (SD 2.7), and FACT-G 80 (SD 15). In the adjusted model, compared to those with no nutritional impairment, older adults with nutritional impairment had greater depression (β = 0.79, 95% CI 0.36-1.23) and anxiety severity (β = 0.86, 95% CI 0.19-1.53), and worse QOL (β = -6.31, 95% CI -8.62 to -4.00). Of the measures of nutrition, MNA-SF ≤11 demonstrated the strongest associations with depression, anxiety, distress, and QOL. CONCLUSION: Nutritional impairment is associated with impaired psychological health and worse QOL. Clinicians should use the MNA-SF to screen older adults for nutritional impairment and offer tailored supportive interventions.
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- 2024
28. Severity of Financial Toxicity for Patients Receiving Palliative Radiation Therapy
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Harris, Jeremy P, Ku, Eric, Harada, Garrett, Hsu, Sophie, Chiao, Elaine, Rao, Pranathi, Healy, Erin, Nagasaka, Misako, Humphreys, Jessica, and Hoyt, Michael A
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Health Services and Systems ,Nursing ,Health Sciences ,Women's Health ,Clinical Research ,Patient Safety ,Health Disparities ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Cancer ,Radiation Oncology ,6.5 Radiotherapy and other non-invasive therapies ,United States ,Humans ,Aged ,Quality of Life ,Financial Stress ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Medicare ,Palliative Care ,FACIT-COST ,financial toxicity ,health-related quality of life ,metastatic cancer ,palliative radiation ,radiation therapy ,Gerontology ,Health services and systems - Abstract
Introduction: Financial toxicity has negative implications for patient well-being and health outcomes. There is a gap in understanding financial toxicity for patients undergoing palliative radiotherapy (RT). Methods: A review of patients treated with palliative RT was conducted from January 2021 to December 2022. The FACIT-COST (COST) was measured (higher scores implying better financial well-being). Financial toxicity was graded according to previously suggested cutoffs: Grade 0 (score ≥26), Grade 1 (14-25), Grade 2 (1-13), and Grade 3 (0). FACIT-TS-G was used for treatment satisfaction, and EORTC QLQ-C30 was assessed for global health status and functional scales. Results: 53 patients were identified. Median COST was 25 (range 0-44), 49% had Grade 0 financial toxicity, 32% Grade 1, 15% Grade 2, and 4% Grade 3. Overall, cancer caused financial hardship among 45%. Higher COST was weakly associated with higher global health status/Quality of Life (QoL), physical functioning, role functioning, and cognitive functioning; moderately associated with higher social functioning; and strongly associated with improved emotional functioning. Higher income or Medicare or private coverage (rather than Medicaid) was associated with less financial toxicity, whereas an underrepresented minority background or a non-English language preference was associated with greater financial toxicity. A multivariate model found that higher area income (HR .80, P = .007) and higher cognitive functioning (HR .96, P = .01) were significantly associated with financial toxicity. Conclusions: Financial toxicity was seen in approximately half of patients receiving palliative RT. The highest risk groups were those with lower income and lower cognitive functioning. This study supports the measurement of financial toxicity by clinicians.
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- 2024
29. The 2023 WSES guidelines on the management of trauma in elderly and frail patients.
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De Simone, Belinda, Chouillard, Elie, Podda, Mauro, Pararas, Nikolaos, de Carvalho Duarte, Gustavo, Fugazzola, Paola, Birindelli, Arianna, Coccolini, Federico, Polistena, Andrea, Sibilla, Maria, Kruger, Vitor, Fraga, Gustavo, Montori, Giulia, Russo, Emanuele, Pintar, Tadeja, Ansaloni, Luca, Avenia, Nicola, Di Saverio, Salomone, Leppäniemi, Ari, Lauretta, Andrea, Sartelli, Massimo, Puzziello, Alessandro, Carcoforo, Paolo, Agnoletti, Vanni, Bissoni, Luca, Isik, Arda, Kluger, Yoram, Moore, Ernest, Romeo, Oreste, Abu-Zidan, Fikri, Beka, Solomon, Weber, Dieter, Tan, Edward, Paolillo, Ciro, Cui, Yunfeng, Kim, Fernando, Picetti, Edoardo, Di Carlo, Isidoro, Toro, Adriana, Sganga, Gabriele, Sganga, Federica, Testini, Mario, Di Meo, Giovanna, Kirkpatrick, Andrew, Marzi, Ingo, déAngelis, Nicola, Kelly, Michael, Wani, Imtiaz, Sakakushev, Boris, Bala, Miklosh, Bonavina, Luigi, Galante, Joseph, Shelat, Vishal, Cobianchi, Lorenzo, Mas, Francesca, Pikoulis, Manos, Damaskos, Dimitrios, Coimbra, Raul, Dhesi, Jugdeep, Hoffman, Melissa, Stahel, Philip, Maier, Ronald, Litvin, Andrey, Latifi, Rifat, Biffl, Walter, and Catena, Fausto
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Ageing ,Antibiotics ,Delirium ,Direct oral anticoagulants management ,Elderly ,End of life ,Frailty ,Geriatric patient ,Imaging ,Laboratory test ,Pain control ,Palliative care ,Resuscitation ,Thrombo-prophylaxis ,Trauma management ,Trauma score ,Vitamin K antagonists anticoagulants management ,Humans ,Wounds and Injuries ,Aged ,Frail Elderly ,Frailty ,Aged ,80 and over ,Practice Guidelines as Topic ,Geriatric Assessment - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The trauma mortality rate is higher in the elderly compared with younger patients. Ageing is associated with physiological changes in multiple systems and correlated with frailty. Frailty is a risk factor for mortality in elderly trauma patients. We aim to provide evidence-based guidelines for the management of geriatric trauma patients to improve it and reduce futile procedures. METHODS: Six working groups of expert acute care and trauma surgeons reviewed extensively the literature according to the topic and the PICO question assigned. Statements and recommendations were assessed according to the GRADE methodology and approved by a consensus of experts in the field at the 10th international congress of the WSES in 2023. RESULTS: The management of elderly trauma patients requires knowledge of ageing physiology, a focused triage, including drug history, frailty assessment, nutritional status, and early activation of trauma protocol to improve outcomes. Acute trauma pain in the elderly has to be managed in a multimodal analgesic approach, to avoid side effects of opioid use. Antibiotic prophylaxis is recommended in penetrating (abdominal, thoracic) trauma, in severely burned and in open fractures elderly patients to decrease septic complications. Antibiotics are not recommended in blunt trauma in the absence of signs of sepsis and septic shock. Venous thromboembolism prophylaxis with LMWH or UFH should be administrated as soon as possible in high and moderate-risk elderly trauma patients according to the renal function, weight of the patient and bleeding risk. A palliative care team should be involved as soon as possible to discuss the end of life in a multidisciplinary approach considering the patients directives, family feelings and representatives desires, and all decisions should be shared. CONCLUSIONS: The management of elderly trauma patients requires knowledge of ageing physiology, a focused triage based on assessing frailty and early activation of trauma protocol to improve outcomes. Geriatric Intensive Care Units are needed to care for elderly and frail trauma patients in a multidisciplinary approach to decrease mortality and improve outcomes.
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- 2024
30. Association between physician age and patterns of end‐of‐life care among older Americans
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Gotanda, Hiroshi, Ikesu, Ryo, Walling, Anne M, Zhang, Jessica J, Xu, Haiyong, Reuben, David B, Wenger, Neil S, Damberg, Cheryl L, Zingmond, David S, Jena, Anupam B, Gross, Nate, and Tsugawa, Yusuke
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Health Services and Systems ,Biomedical and Clinical Sciences ,Clinical Sciences ,Health Sciences ,Clinical Research ,Aging ,Health Services ,Management of diseases and conditions ,7.2 End of life care ,advance care planning ,end-of-life care ,palliative care ,physician age ,end‐of‐life care ,Medical and Health Sciences ,Geriatrics ,Biomedical and clinical sciences ,Health sciences ,Psychology - Abstract
BackgroundEnd-of-life (EOL) care patterns may differ by physician age given differences in how physicians are trained or changes associated with aging. We sought to compare patterns of EOL care delivered to older Americans according to physician age.MethodsWe conducted a cross-sectional study of a 20% sample of Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries aged ≥66 years who died in 2016-2019 (n = 487,293). We attributed beneficiaries to the physician who had >50% of primary care visits during the last 6 months of life. We compared beneficiary-level outcomes by physician age (
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- 2024
31. Future policy and research for advance care planning in dementia: consensus recommendations from an international Delphi panel of the European Association for Palliative Care.
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Nakanishi, Miharu, Martins Pereira, Sandra, Van den Block, Lieve, Parker, Deborah, Harrison-Dening, Karen, Di Giulio, Paola, In der Schmitten, Jürgen, Larkin, Philip, Mimica, Ninoslav, Sudore, Rebecca, Holmerová, Iva, Korfage, Ida, and van der Steen, Jenny
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Humans ,Advance Care Planning ,Advance Directives ,Consensus ,Delphi Technique ,Dementia ,Europe ,Health Policy ,Palliative Care - Abstract
Advance care planning (ACP) is increasingly recognised in the global agenda for dementia care. The European Association for Palliative Care (EAPC) Taskforce on ACP in Dementia aimed to provide recommendations for policy initiatives and future research. We conducted a four-round Delphi study with a 33-country panel of 107 experts between September, 2021, and June, 2022, that was approved by the EAPC Board. Consensus was achieved on 11 recommendations concerning the regulation of advance directives, equity of access, and dementia-inclusive approaches and conversations to express patients values. Identified research gaps included the need for an evidence-based dementia-specific practice model that optimises engagement and communication with people with fluctuating and impaired capacity and their families to support decision making, while also empowering people to adjust their decisions if their goals or preferences change over time. Policy gaps included insufficient health services frameworks for dementia-inclusive practice. The results highlight the need for more evidence and policy development that support inclusive ACP practice models.
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- 2024
32. Preserving Dignity and Epistemic Justice in Palliative Care for Patients with Serious Mental Health Problems
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Grassi, Luigi, Cruciata, Marco, Belvederi Murri, Martino, Folesani, Federica, Caruso, Rosangela, and Bortolotti, Lisa, editor
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- 2025
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33. Spiritual AI: Scope of Study
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Garg, Muskan, Celebi, Emre, Series Editor, Chen, Jingdong, Series Editor, Gopi, E. S., Series Editor, Neustein, Amy, Series Editor, Liotta, Antonio, Series Editor, Di Mauro, Mario, Series Editor, and Garg, Muskan
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- 2025
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34. The Role of Health Literacy and Care Pathways in the Provision of Palliative Care and Patient-Centred Care: A Discussion Paper
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Urrizola, Amaia, Lundeby, Tonje, Hjermstad, Marianne, Deliens, Luc, Caraceni, Augusto, Fallon, Marie, Kaasa, Stein, Hole, Torstein, editor, Kvangarsnes, Marit, editor, Landstad, Bodil J., editor, Bårdsgjerde, Elise Kvalsund, editor, and Tippett-Spirtou, Sandra Elizabeth, editor
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- 2025
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35. British unpaid carers' perspectives on what impacts their resilience when providing end-of-life care at home: a scoping review
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Gould, Samantha Joan, Borgstrom, Erica, Garcia, Rebecca, Wee, Bee, and McCallum, Kay
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- 2024
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36. Intersectional employee voice inequalities and culture care theory: the case of migrant palliative care nurses in Saudi Arabia
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Davies, Julie, Anjuman, Thamina, Al Ghamdi, Zeyad, Altamimi, Saud, Ellahi, Sheikh Mateen, Al Thani, Moza, Huang, Frank, Alsoqair, Yara, and Alshehri, Rawan
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- 2024
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37. The impact of internet connectivity when conducting a virtual clinical trial with participants living in rural areas
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Holland, Diane E., Vanderboom, Catherine E., Mandrekar, Jay, Harmsen, William S., Gustavson, Allison M., Kaufman, Brystana G., Dose, Ann Marie, Wild, Ellen M., Ingram, Cory, and Griffin, Joan M.
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- 2024
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38. A comparison of the prevalence of dry mouth and other symptoms using two different versions of the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System on an inpatient palliative care unit.
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Monsen, Ragnhild, Lerdal, Anners, Nordgarden, Hilde, Herlofson, Bente, and Gay, Caryl
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Advanced cancer ,Dry mouth ,Edmonton Symptom Assessment System ,Open-ended question ,Symptom assessment ,Adult ,Humans ,Palliative Care ,Inpatients ,Symptom Assessment ,Prevalence ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Retrospective Studies ,Neoplasms ,Constipation ,Sleep Wake Disorders - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Symptom assessment is key to effective symptom management and palliative care for patients with advanced cancer. Symptom prevalence and severity estimates vary widely, possibly dependent on the assessment tool used. Are symptoms specifically asked about or must the patients add them as additional symptoms? This study compared the prevalence and severity of patient-reported symptoms in two different versions of a multi-symptom assessment tool. In one version, three symptoms dry mouth, constipation, sleep problems were among those systematically assessed, while in the other, these symptoms had to be added as an Other problem. METHODS: This retrospective cross-sectional study included adult patients with advanced cancer at an inpatient palliative care unit. Data were collected from two versions of the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS): modified (ESAS-m) listed 11 symptoms and revised (ESAS-r) listed 9 and allowed patients to add one Other problem. Seven similar symptoms were listed in both versions. RESULTS: In 2013, 184 patients completed ESAS-m, and in 2017, 156 completed ESAS-r. Prevalence and severity of symptoms listed in both versions did not differ. In ESAS-m, 83% reported dry mouth, 73% constipation, and 71% sleep problems, but on ESAS-r, these symptoms were reported by only 3%, 15% and
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- 2024
39. Consensus definition of advance care planning in dementia: A 33-country Delphi study.
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Harrison Dening, Karen, Parker, Deborah, Mimica, Ninoslav, Holmerova, Iva, Larkin, Philip, Martins Pereira, Sandra, Rietjens, Judith, Korfage, Ida, van der Steen, Jenny, Nakanishi, Miharu, Van den Block, Lieve, Di Giulio, Paola, Gonella, Silvia, In der Schmitten, Jürgen, and Sudore, Rebecca
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advance care planning ,conceptualization ,decision-making ,dementia ,palliative care ,Humans ,Consensus ,Delphi Technique ,Dementia ,Advance Care Planning ,Terminal Care - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Existing advance care planning (ACP) definitional frameworks apply to individuals with decision-making capacity. We aimed to conceptualize ACP for dementia in terms of its definition and issues that deserve particular attention. METHODS: Delphi study with phases: (A) adaptation of a generic ACP framework by a task force of the European Association for Palliative Care (EAPC); (B) four online surveys by 107 experts from 33 countries, September 2021 to June 2022; (C) approval by the EAPC board. RESULTS: ACP in dementia was defined as a communication process adapted to the persons capacity, which includes, and is continued with, family if available. We identified pragmatic boundaries regarding participation and time (i.e., current or end-of-life care). Three interrelated issues that deserve particular attention were capacity, family, and engagement and communication. DISCUSSION: A communication and relationship-centered definitional framework of ACP in dementia evolved through international consensus supporting inclusiveness of persons with dementia and their family. HIGHLIGHTS: This article offers a consensus definitional framework of advance care planning in dementia. The definition covers all stages of capacity and includes family caregivers. Particularly important are (1) capacity, (2) family, (3) engagement, and communication. Fluctuating capacity was visualized in relation to roles and engaging stakeholders.
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- 2024
40. Defining the Time-limited Trial for Patients with Critical Illness: An Official American Thoracic Society Workshop Report.
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Rubin, Eileen, Schenker, Yael, Sullivan, Donald, Thornton, J, Viglianti, Elizabeth, Costa, Deena, Creutzfeldt, Claire, Detsky, Michael, Engel, Heidi, Grover, Neera, Hope, Aluko, Katz, Jason, Kohn, Rachel, Miller, Andrew, Nabozny, Michael, Nelson, Judith, Shanawani, Hasan, Stevens, Jennifer, Turnbull, Alison, Weiss, Curtis, Wirpsa, M, Cox, Christopher, Kruser, Jacqueline, Ashana, Deepshikha, Courtright, Katherine, Kross, Erin, and Neville, Thanh
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critical care ,life-sustaining therapy ,palliative care ,shared decision making ,Humans ,United States ,Decision Making ,Critical Illness ,Critical Care ,Consensus ,Patients - Abstract
In critical care, the specific, structured approach to patient care known as a time-limited trial has been promoted in the literature to help patients, surrogate decision makers, and clinicians navigate consequential decisions about life-sustaining therapy in the face of uncertainty. Despite promotion of the time-limited trial approach, a lack of consensus about its definition and essential elements prevents optimal clinical use and rigorous evaluation of its impact. The objectives of this American Thoracic Society Workshop Committee were to establish a consensus definition of a time-limited trial in critical care, identify the essential elements for conducting a time-limited trial, and prioritize directions for future work. We achieved these objectives through a structured search of the literature, a modified Delphi process with 100 interdisciplinary and interprofessional stakeholders, and iterative committee discussions. We conclude that a time-limited trial for patients with critical illness is a collaborative plan among clinicians and a patient and/or their surrogate decision makers to use life-sustaining therapy for a defined duration, after which the patients response to therapy informs the decision to continue care directed toward recovery, transition to care focused exclusively on comfort, or extend the trials duration. The plans 16 essential elements follow four sequential phases: consider, plan, support, and reassess. We acknowledge considerable gaps in evidence about the impact of time-limited trials and highlight a concern that if inadequately implemented, time-limited trials may perpetuate unintended harm. Future work is needed to better implement this defined, specific approach to care in practice through a person-centered equity lens and to evaluate its impact on patients, surrogates, and clinicians.
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- 2024
41. Does a novel community-based outpatient palliative care intervention for Parkinsons disease and related disorders improve care? Qualitative results from patients and care partners.
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Bock, Meredith, Macchi, Zachary, Martin, Christine, Sillau, Stefan, Kluger, Benzi, Katz, Maya, Dini, Megan, Jones, Jacqueline, Ayele, Roman, Kutner, Jean, Pantilat, Steven, and Harrison, Krista
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Parkinson’s disease ,caregivers ,implementation science ,palliative care ,telemedicine ,Humans ,Palliative Care ,Parkinson Disease ,Caregivers ,Outpatients ,Qualitative Research - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Palliative care has the potential to address significant unmet needs in people with Parkinsons disease and related disorders, but models that rely on in-person specialty palliative care teams have limited scalability. AIM: To describe patient and care partner experiences with a novel, community-based palliative care intervention for Parkinsons disease. DESIGN: Qualitative study embedded in a randomized clinical trial to document participant experiences with a novel palliative care intervention (community neurologist training and remote team-based specialist palliative care). Transcripts were coded and thematically analyzed through a combination of team-based inductive and deductive coding. SETTING/PARTICIPANTS: Twenty-eight patients and 33 care partners purposively sampled from participants in a randomized clinical trial of a palliative care intervention for Parkinsons disease and related disorders conducted at nine sites. RESULTS: Benefits of the intervention included management of a wider range of non-motor symptoms, facilitation of conversations about the future, greater engagement with the health care team, and increased referrals to resources. Participants identified areas of improvement, including uptake of palliative care training by community neurologists, additional prognostic counseling, and clarity and timeliness of communication with the multidisciplinary team. CONCLUSIONS: Clinicians caring for people with Parkinsons disease and related disorders should screen for non-motor symptoms, provide regular prognostic counseling, and refer to specialty palliative care services earlier in the course of illness. Future interventions should be designed to promote uptake of palliative care training by community neurologists and further optimize referral to and coordination with in-person or remote specialty palliative teams.
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- 2024
42. Rates, patterns, and predictors of specialty palliative care consultation among patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure.
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Walling, Anne, Kanwal, Fasiha, Serper, Marina, Hernaez, Ruben, Sundaram, Vinay, Kaplan, David, Taddei, Tamar, Mahmud, Nadim, and Patel, Arpan
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acute-on-chronic liver failure ,cirrhosis ,decompensation ,end of life ,palliative care - Abstract
BACKGROUND & AIMS: There is growing acceptance that principles of palliative care should be integrated into the management of serious illnesses affecting the liver, such as acute-on-chronic liver failure (ACLF). However, rates, patterns, and predictors of specialty palliative care consultation among patients with ACLF have not been well-described. METHODS: We performed a retrospective cohort study of patients hospitalized with ACLF between 1/1/2008 and 12/31/2018 using the VOCAL cohort. Patients were followed until 6/2021. We used mixed-effects regression analyses to identify significant patient and facility factors associated with palliative care consultation. We examined timing of consultation, the influence of ACLF characteristics, and facility-level variation on receipt of palliative care consultation. RESULTS: We identified 21,987 patients hospitalized with ACLF, of whom 30.5% received specialty palliative care consultation. Higher ACLF grade (ACLF-2 [odds ratio (OR) 1.82, 95% CI 1.67-1.99], ACLF-3 [OR 3.06, 95% CI 2.76-3.40]), prior specialty palliative care consultation (OR 2.62, 95% CI 2.36-2.91), and hepatocellular carcinoma (OR 2.10, 95% CI 1.89-2.33) were associated with consultation. Consultation occurred latest and closest to the time of death for patients with ACLF-3 compared to ACLF-1 and ACLF-2. Significant facility-level variation in consultation persisted among patients with ACLF-3, despite adjusting for multiple patient and facility factors. CONCLUSION: In this large cohort of hospitalized patients with ACLF, specialty palliative care consultation was rare, more common in patients with higher grade ACLF, and tended to occur closer to the time of death for the sickest patients. Greater attention should be placed on earlier integration of palliative care during acute hospitalizations in patients with ACLF. IMPACT AND IMPLICATIONS: Though palliative care consultation is recommended for patients with acute-on-chronic liver failure, there is no data demonstrating how often this occurs during hospitalizations, on a population level. We found that consultation occurs in only 30.5% of patients and occurs later for patients with grade 3 acute-on-chronic liver failure. Our data should provoke clinicians to urgently consider quality improvement efforts to integrate palliative care into the management of these seriously ill patients.
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- 2024
43. The Surprise Question for Prognostication in People With Parkinsons Disease and Related Disorders.
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Mahes, Ananth, Macchi, Zachary, Martin, Christine, Katz, Maya, Galifianakis, Nicholas, Kutner, Jean, Sillau, Stefan, Kluger, Benzi, and Pantilat, Steven
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Parkinsons disease ,palliative care ,prognostication ,surprise question ,Humans ,Parkinson Disease ,Prospective Studies ,Palliative Care ,Terminal Care ,Risk Assessment ,Prognosis - Abstract
CONTEXT: Parkinsons disease and related disorders (PDRD) are fatal neurodegenerative disorders characterized by a fluctuating course that can complicate prognostication. The surprise question (SQ: Would you be surprised if your patient died in the next year?) has been used to identify patients with limited prognosis but has not been assessed in PDRD. OBJECTIVES: To determine the validity of the SQ in predicting 12-month mortality in PDRD. METHODS: Data was analyzed from 301 patients and 34 community-based neurologists who were participating in a clinical trial of outpatient palliative care for patients with PDRD. Clinicians answered the SQ for each patient at baseline. Descriptive statistics at baseline, chi-square tests of independence, 2 × 2 and 2 × 3 cross tables were used. Survival analysis compared SQ responses using Kaplan-Meier curves. Risk estimate analyses identified patient characteristics associated with clinicians responses. RESULTS: Mortality was 10.3% (N = 31) at 1 year. The sensitivity and specificity of the SQ was 80.7% and 58.9%, respectively with AUC = 0.70, positive predictive value of 18.4% and negative predictive value of 96.4%. Older age, atypical parkinsonism, and dementia were associated with responding no to the SQ. CONCLUSION: The SQ is sensitive to 12-month mortality in PDRD, with a high negative predictive value. The SQ may be useful for identifying patients less likely to die within a year and may be useful for identifying patients with palliative care needs outside of end-of-life care. This latter use may assist in mobilizing early and timely referral to specialist palliative care.
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- 2024
44. Effectiveness of Medical Music Therapy Practice: Integrative Research Using the Electronic Health Record: Rationale, Design, and Population Characteristics.
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Rodgers-Melnick, Samuel, Rivard, Rachael, Block, Seneca, and Dusek, Jeffery
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clinical effectiveness ,electronic health record ,music therapy ,Humans ,Female ,Aged ,United States ,Male ,Music Therapy ,Retrospective Studies ,Electronic Health Records ,Medicare ,Palliative Care - Abstract
Background: Several clinical trials support the efficacy of music therapy (MT) for improving outcomes in hospitalized patients, but few studies have evaluated the real-world delivery and integration of MT across multiple medical centers. This article describes the rationale, design, and population characteristics of a retrospective study examining the delivery and integration of MT within a large health system. Methods: A retrospective electronic health record (EHR) review was conducted of hospitalized patients seen by and/or referred to MT between January 2017 and July 2020. MT was provided across ten medical centers, including an academic medical center, a freestanding cancer center, and eight community hospitals. Discrete demographic, clinical, and MT treatment and referral characteristics were extracted from the EHR, cleaned, and organized using regular expressions functions, and they were summarized using descriptive statistics. Results: The MT team (average 11.6 clinical fulltime equivalent staff/year) provided 14,261 sessions to 7378 patients across 9091 hospitalizations. Patients were predominantly female (63.7%), White (54.3%) or Black/African American (44.0%), 63.7 ± 18.5 years of age at admission, and insured under Medicare (51.1%), Medicaid (18.1%), or private insurance (14.2%). Patients hospitalizations (median length of stay: 5 days) were primarily for cardiovascular (11.8%), respiratory (9.9%), or musculoskeletal (8.9%) conditions. Overall, 39.4% of patients hospital admissions included a mental health diagnosis, and 15.4% were referred to palliative care. Patients were referred by physicians (34.7%), nurses (29.4%), or advanced practice providers (24.7%) for coping (32.0%), anxiety reduction (20.4%), or pain management (10.1%). Therapists provided sessions to patients discharged from medical/surgical (74.5%), oncology (18.4%), or intensive care (5.8%) units. Conclusions: This retrospective study indicates that MT can be integrated across a large health system for addressing the needs of socioeconomically diverse patients. However, future research is needed to assess MTs impact on health care utilization (i.e., length of stay and rates of readmission) and immediate patient-reported outcomes.
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- 2024
45. Whats in This For You? Whats in This For Me?: A Win-Win Perspective of Involving Study Advisory Committee Members in Palliative Care Research.
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Booker-Vaughns, Juanita, Rosini, Dawn, Batra, Romilla, Kizzie-Gillett, Constance, Maguire, Margaret, Navarro, Martha, Reddy Pidatala, Neha, Vaughan, William, Welsh, Sally, Williams, Pluscedia, Young-Brinn, Angela, Van Allen, Kaitlyn, Cuthel, Allison, Liddicoat Yamarik, Rebecca, Flannery, Mara, Goldfeld, Keith, Grudzen, Corita, Dunn, Patrick, Galvin, Robert, Hopkins, Ernest, Isaacs, Eric, and Chan, Garrett
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engagement ,palliative care ,stakeholders ,study advisory committee - Abstract
Study advisory committees (SACs) provide critical value to clinical trials by providing unique perspectives that pull from personal and professional experiences related to the trials healthcare topic. The Emergency Medicine Palliative Care Access (EMPallA) study had the privilege of convening a 16-person SAC from the projects inception to completion. The study team wanted to understand the impact this project had on the SAC members. In this narrative, we use reflective dialogue to share SAC members lived experiences and the impact the EMPallA study has had on members both personally and professionally. We detail the (1) benefits SAC members, specifically patients, and caregivers, have had through working on this project. (2) The importance of recruiting diverse SAC members with different lived experiences and leveraging their feedback in clinical research. (3) Value of community capacity building to ensure the common vision of the clinical trial is promoted.
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- 2024
46. The differences in code status conversation approaches reported by emergency medicine and palliative care clinicians: A mixed-method study.
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Ouchi, Kei, Prachanukool, Thidathit, Aaronson, Emily, Lakin, Joshua, Higuchi, Masaya, Liu, Shan, Kennedy, Maura, Revette, Anna, Chary, Anita, Kaithamattam, Jenson, Lee, Brandon, Neville, Thanh, Hasdianda, Mohammad, Sudore, Rebecca, Schonberg, Mara, Tulsky, James, and Block, Susan
- Subjects
Humans ,Palliative Care ,Quality of Life ,Communication ,Surveys and Questionnaires ,Emergency Medicine - Abstract
BACKGROUND: During acute health deterioration, emergency medicine and palliative care clinicians routinely discuss code status (e.g., shared decision making about mechanical ventilation) with seriously ill patients. Little is known about their approaches. We sought to elucidate how code status conversations are conducted by emergency medicine and palliative care clinicians and why their approaches are different. METHODS: We conducted a sequential-explanatory, mixed-method study in three large academic medical centers in the Northeastern United States. Attending physicians and advanced practice providers working in emergency medicine and palliative care were eligible. Among the survey respondents, we purposefully sampled the participants for follow-up interviews. We collected clinicians self-reported approaches in code status conversations and their rationales. A survey with a 5-point Likert scale (very unlikely to very likely) was used to assess the likelihood of asking about medical procedures (procedure based) and patients values (value based) during code status conversations, followed by semistructured interviews. RESULTS: Among 272 clinicians approached, 206 completed the survey (a 76% response rate). The reported approaches differed greatly (e.g., 91% of palliative care clinicians reported asking about a patients acceptable quality of life compared to 59% of emergency medicine clinicians). Of the 206 respondents, 118 (57%) agreed to subsequent interviews; our final number of semistructured interviews included seven emergency medicine clinicians and nine palliative care clinicians. The palliative care clinicians stated that the value-based questions offer insight into patients goals, which is necessary for formulating a recommendation. In contrast, emergency medicine clinicians stated that while value-based questions are useful, they are vague and necessitate extended discussions, which are inappropriate during emergencies. CONCLUSIONS: Emergency medicine and palliative care clinicians reported conducting code status conversations differently. The rationales may be shaped by their clinical practices and experiences.
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- 2024
47. Hispanic/Latinx and Spanish Language Concordance Among Palliative Care Clinicians and Patients in Hospital Settings in California.
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Zapata, Carly, Poore, Timothy, ORiordan, David, and Pantilat, Steven
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ethnicity ,inpatient palliative care ,language concordance ,race ,Humans ,Ethnicity ,Palliative Care ,Minority Groups ,California ,Hispanic or Latino ,Hospitals ,Language - Abstract
Background: Members of racial or ethnic minority groups utilize palliative care (PC) services less than non-Hispanic White patients and multiple factors contribute to this disparity. The impact of racial, ethnic, and language (REL) concordance between patients and clinicians has been demonstrated in general medical populations, but not in PC populations. We characterized the racial and ethnic composition and languages spoken of California PC clinicians and patients to examine clinical impacts of REL concordance. Methods: Using Palliative Care Quality Network data, 15 inpatient teams were identified in California that had collected data on patient race/ethnicity and language. Patient and clinician data were analyzed using means and medians for continuous variables, and chi-squared tests to explore similarities and differences between clinician and patient data. Results: 51 clinicians from nine teams completed the survey. The largest non-White and non-English speaking groups among patients and clinicians identified as Hispanic/Latinx (31.5% of patients, 16.3% of clinicians) and as Spanish speakers (22.6% of patients, 7.5% of clinicians). There was a significantly higher proportion of Hispanic/Latinx patients compared to clinicians (p-value 0.01), with Southern California demonstrating the largest difference (30.4% of patients vs. 10.7 % of clinicians, p-value 0.01). Similar proportions of patients and clinicians reported Spanish fluency (22.6% vs 27.5%, p-value 0.31). Discussion: We found significant differences in the racial/ethnic distributions of Hispanic/Latinx patients and clinicians in California, prompting consideration of whether a lack of representation of Hispanic/Latinx clinicians relative to the patient population may contribute to lower palliative care utilization among Hispanic/Latinx patients.
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- 2024
48. Dr. Betty Ferrell and the Extraordinary Pursuit of Worldwide Palliative Nursing Education
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Paice, Judith A., Malloy, Pamela, Mazanec, Polly, Coyne, Patrick J., and Virani-Cooksey, Rose M.
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- 2025
- Full Text
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49. Honoring Dr. Betty Ferrell as a Paradigm-Shifting Palliative Care and Oncology Nurse Researcher
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Odom, J. Nicholas, Sun, Virginia, Grant, Marcia, Ersek, Mary, Krouse, Robert, and Bakitas, Marie A.
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- 2025
- Full Text
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50. A Beacon of Wisdom: Tribute to Dr. Betty Ferrell as a Devoted Mentor
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Gray, Tamryn F., McAndrew, Natalie S., Moss, Karen O., and Sun, Virginia
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- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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