Palliative Skills for Frontline Clinicians: Case Vignettes in Everyday Hospital Medicine
Editat de Kate Aberger, David Wangen Limba Engleză Paperback – 10 iun 2020
This case-based book features a multidisciplinary, palliative-trained authorship, including neurologists, nephrologists, emergency physicians, surgeons, intensivists, and obstetricians. Divided into four parts, Palliative Skills for Frontline Clinicians outlines common clinical scenarios across settings and specialties to highlight unmet needs of patients with potentially terminal illnesses. Each case is broken down into the usual standard approach, and delves into detail regarding different palliative interventions that can be appropriate in those scenarios. These are meant to be practice changing; down to the actual words used to communicate with patients. In addition to the book’s focus on the principles of palliative care and the “art” of treating the patient, approaches to communication with the patient’s families for the best long-term outcomes are discussed.
Concise and pragmatic, Palliative Skills for Frontline Clinicians is meant to be practice changing. It provides readers with both a new conceptual framework, as well as actual words to communicate with patients and medication doses for symptom management. It is an invaluable resource for non-palliative trained clinicians who wish to strengthen their palliative care skills.
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9783030444136
ISBN-10: 3030444139
Pagini: 227
Ilustrații: XXIII, 227 p. 6 illus., 3 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2020
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
ISBN-10: 3030444139
Pagini: 227
Ilustrații: XXIII, 227 p. 6 illus., 3 illus. in color.
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.36 kg
Ediția:1st ed. 2020
Editura: Springer International Publishing
Colecția Springer
Locul publicării:Cham, Switzerland
Cuprins
Part I: Emergency Medicine.- High Yield Approach to the ED Goals of Care Conversation.- A Palliative Approach to End Stage COPD.- This POLST Makes No Sense.- Treating Pain and Prognosticating in Metastatic Cancer.- Complex Pain Management and Goals of Care in a Debilitated Cancer Patient.- To Intubate or Not to Intubate: Ask the Right Questions.- ED Approach to the Hospice patient.- Part II: Inpatient Internal Medicine.- “We can’t let him starve”: Artificial Nutrition in Patients with Advanced Dementia.- Shared Decision-Making in the Setting of a Large Ischemic Stroke.- Prognostication and Goals of Care in Advanced Parkinson’s Disease.- Saying Yes to Aggressive Measures: The Role of Neuropalliative Care in Critically Ill Patients with Potential for Recovery.- “I am a Fighter”: Recognizing and Responding to Cancer Metaphors.- “What does the awake ventilated patient really want?”: Shared-decision making in the ICU.- A Mother’s Love – Support Despite Disagreeing with Goals of Care.- End-Stage Renal Disease and Shared Decision-Making Dilemmas.- Discontinuing Continuous Renal Replacement Therapy (CRRT) in the Intensive Care Unit.- Teaching Learners How to Approach Family Decisions as a Process.- Part III: Surgery.- Trach/PEG Consult in the ICU.- Rescinding DNR Orders in the Operating Room.- A Threshold Moment, Preserving Patient Dignity, and the Value of a Time Limited Trial.- Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Anticipating Poor Surgical Outcomes while Honoring Patient Autonomy.- Surgery for the Hospice Patient: When is it Appropriate?.- Non-Operative Approach To Caring For The Ischemic Limb.- Placing a Feeding Tube in a Patient with Dementia.- Malignant Bowel Obstruction In A Dying Patient: To Operate Or Not?.- Geriatric Trauma Decision-Making Based on Functional Outcomes.- Part IV: Specialty Medicine.- Decision by Surrogates for a Patient with a Psychiatric History.- Palliative Approach to Patients with Concurrent Serious Illness and Substance Use Disorder.- Responding To Spiritual Suffering And Hope During A Goals Of Care Conversation.- Trisomy 18: Early And Concurrent Palliative Care Enhances Delivery And Neonatal Planning.- Navigating Colleagues and Parents in the Pediatric ICU.
Recenzii
“I am full of admiration and hope that this book succeeds. … People who work in palliative care will enjoy it and get a few pointers about working alongside palliative care-sympathetic specialists from other fields.” (Roger Woodruff, IAHPC Book Reviews, hospicecare.com, Vol. 22 (1), January, 2021)
Notă biografică
Kate Aberger,
Director of Palliative and Geriatric Medicine,
St. Joseph’s Health,
Paterson, NJ,
USA.
Attending Physician, Emergency,
Department Robert Wood Johnson,
University Hospital,
Somerset, NJ,
USA.
David Wang,
Director of Palliative Medicine,
Scripps Health, San Diego,
CA, USA.
Director of Palliative and Geriatric Medicine,
St. Joseph’s Health,
Paterson, NJ,
USA.
Attending Physician, Emergency,
Department Robert Wood Johnson,
University Hospital,
Somerset, NJ,
USA.
David Wang,
Director of Palliative Medicine,
Scripps Health, San Diego,
CA, USA.
Textul de pe ultima copertă
Rooted in everyday hospital medicine, Palliative Skills for Frontline Clinicians addresses the challenges of delivering complex care to patients living with serious illnesses. Spanning emergency medicine, internal medicine, surgery and various subspecialties, each chapter reads like a story, comparing usual care with a step-by-step palliative-based approach.
This case-based book features a multidisciplinary, palliative-trained authorship, including neurologists, nephrologists, emergency physicians, surgeons, intensivists, and obstetricians. Divided into four parts, Palliative Skills for Frontline Clinicians outlines common clinical scenarios across settings and specialties to highlight unmet needs of patients with potentially terminal illnesses. Each case is broken down into the usual standard approach, and delves into detail regarding different palliative interventions that can be appropriate in those scenarios. These are meant to be practice changing; down to the actual words used to communicate with patients. In addition to the book’s focus on the principles of palliative care and the “art” of treating the patient, approaches to communication with the patient’s families for the best long-term outcomes are discussed.
Concise and pragmatic, Palliative Skills for Frontline Clinicians is meant to be practice changing. It provides readers with both a new conceptual framework, as well as actual words to communicate with patients and medication doses for symptom management. It is an invaluable resource for non-palliative trained clinicians who wish to strengthen their palliative care skills.
This case-based book features a multidisciplinary, palliative-trained authorship, including neurologists, nephrologists, emergency physicians, surgeons, intensivists, and obstetricians. Divided into four parts, Palliative Skills for Frontline Clinicians outlines common clinical scenarios across settings and specialties to highlight unmet needs of patients with potentially terminal illnesses. Each case is broken down into the usual standard approach, and delves into detail regarding different palliative interventions that can be appropriate in those scenarios. These are meant to be practice changing; down to the actual words used to communicate with patients. In addition to the book’s focus on the principles of palliative care and the “art” of treating the patient, approaches to communication with the patient’s families for the best long-term outcomes are discussed.
Concise and pragmatic, Palliative Skills for Frontline Clinicians is meant to be practice changing. It provides readers with both a new conceptual framework, as well as actual words to communicate with patients and medication doses for symptom management. It is an invaluable resource for non-palliative trained clinicians who wish to strengthen their palliative care skills.
Caracteristici
Case-based for ideal learning scenarios Includes specialist-specific chapters (emergency medicine, surgeons, and critical care physicians) Geared specifically to fill a much-needed area, non-palliative care physicians