Quill TE. Caring for Patients at the End of Life. New York, NY: Oxford University Press; 2001:176.Quill, T.E. (2001). Caring for patients at the end of life. Oxford: Oxford University Press.↵ Quill Timothy E . Caring for Patients at the End of Life . Oxford : Oxford University...
In Caring for Patients at the End of Life: Facing an Uncertain Future Together, Dr. Quill uses his wide range of clinical experience caring for severely ill patients and their families to illustrate the challenges and potential of end-of-life care. Section one utilizes the near deathexperiences...
Caring for patients and families at the end of life: withdrawal of intensive care in the patient's home. Mann S., Galler D., William P. & Frost P. (2004) Caring for patients at the end of life: withdrawal of intensive care in the patient's home. New Zealand Medical Journal 117, ...
CN10 Stress of conscience in healthcare personnel caring for patients at the end of life during the COVID-19 pandemic doi:10.1016/j.annonc.2024.08.396Annals of OncologyM. LarssonC. OlssonJ. AppelgrenC. BthM. Dahlen GranrudV. GrndahlA.K. HelgesenC. Melin JohanssonT. SandsdalenJ. ster...
This is especially important for veterans who experienced combat or other trauma, particularly if unaddressed experiences, memories or emotions resurface near the end of life. “With veterans who experience post-traumatic stress or went through some type of trauma, if we don't recognize the signs ...
Whenever it comes, death is not optional. We all die, our patients, their families, our families and ourselves, the physicians. Freud once said, “The goal of all life is death.”2 On a more spiritual note, Coelho described death as a “beautiful...
We undertook a qualitative study of end-of-life care during 1996 and 1997 in the closed-panel staff-model, not-for-profit, health center division of Harvard Pilgrim Health Care. We collected and analyzed data from five focus groups composed of family members of patients who had died during ...
The aim of this paper is to present the state of the science concerning issues in end-of-life (EOL) care which have an impact on intensive care nurses possibilities to provide nursing care for dying patients and their families. The perspective of families is also illuminated and finally ethica...
medications and maintain her insurance for her family as she reached the end of her life. For uninsured patients, in addition to the obvious stresses of a cancer diagnosis and the effects of therapy, they are burdened with bills that may be difficult or impossible to pay. Many patients...
The chapters are divided into categories: communication and time orientation, pain, religion and spirituality, activities of daily living and the body, family, men and women, staff relations, birth, end of life, mental health, and traditional medicine. 鈥...