Providing a Palliative Care Service: Towards an Evidence BaseOxford University Press, 1999 - Počet stran: 276 This book addresses key questions about the need for palliative care, the current provision of services and the evidence for the effectiveness of a range of alternative models of organisation in pallitaive care. A broad approach is taken to include the needs of both cancer patients andpatients with other terminal diseases and the relationship between palliative care and other aspects of health care services. The book is based on a comprehensive and detailed review of the international scientific literature on evaluation of palliative care, providing an essential evidence base forpolicy decisions. |
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Strana 153
... Limited advantage of HBHC Many comparisons , so a few symptom differences are likely due to chance . V. wide confidence interval ( small numbers of patients remaining ) means some genuine differences may have been undetected . High drop ...
... Limited advantage of HBHC Many comparisons , so a few symptom differences are likely due to chance . V. wide confidence interval ( small numbers of patients remaining ) means some genuine differences may have been undetected . High drop ...
Strana 159
... limited , but no differences were seen between groups in terms of activities of daily living or cognitive functioning . An Italian non- randomized comparison of patients ' home - based palliative care with conventional care also showed ...
... limited , but no differences were seen between groups in terms of activities of daily living or cognitive functioning . An Italian non- randomized comparison of patients ' home - based palliative care with conventional care also showed ...
Strana 161
... limited evidence from non - experimental research that support teams can improve pain control ( but no evidence about other quality of life measures ) for patients dying in hospital ( Ellershaw et al . 1995 , McQuillan et al . 1996 ) ...
... limited evidence from non - experimental research that support teams can improve pain control ( but no evidence about other quality of life measures ) for patients dying in hospital ( Ellershaw et al . 1995 , McQuillan et al . 1996 ) ...
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AIDS alternative approach appropriate areas aspects assessment authors cancer patients care-givers carers clinical compared comparison concerns conclusions conventional costs countries death dementia described descriptive difficulties disease doctors dying effective et al evaluation evidence examined experience funding Health Higginson home care Hosp hospice care hospice patients identified impact important improve in-patient included increase intervention interview involvement issues Italy lack less levels limited literature London measures models months needs Nurs nursing oncology organization outcome pain Palliat palliative care services Parkes patients dying practice practitioners primary problems psychological Question randomized range rated received referred relatives relevant reported response role satisfaction settings showed significant social specialist palliative specific staff stress support teams survey symptom control terminally ill treatment trial types units views weeks Yes Unclear