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1.
Soc Work Health Care ; 60(1): 93-105, 2021.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33554768

RESUMO

Social workers and nurses, as members of interprofessional palliative medicine teams, faced unfamiliar challenges and opportunities as they endeavored to provide humanistic care to patients and families during the coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. Typical methods for engaging patients and families in medical decision-making became thwarted by visitation restrictions and patients' dramatic health declines. This paper presents an innovative social work and nursing intervention aimed at enhancing humanistic patient/family care and advanced directive dialogs. Through incorporating a narrative synthesis of the teams' reflective journals from COVID-19, the paper chronicles the intervention implementation, patient/family responses, and team members' personal and professional meaning-making processes.


Assuntos
COVID-19/epidemiologia , Recursos Humanos de Enfermagem Hospitalar/organização & administração , Cuidados Paliativos/organização & administração , Serviço Social/organização & administração , Centros de Traumatologia/organização & administração , Humanos , Pandemias , SARS-CoV-2
2.
J Pain Symptom Manage ; 61(6): 1287-1296, 2021 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33348027

RESUMO

Palliative care (PC) and hospice services have experienced shortages before 2020, and during the initial phases of the current pandemic, more critical gaps are expected with future surges, much as scarcity in intensive care unit services may recur during the COVID-19 pandemic. Although ethical allocation of ventilators and intensive care unit care is the subject of important discussions during this pandemic, caring for those at the end of life and those not desiring or qualifying for critical interventions must not be neglected, as critical care and comfort-focused care are intertwined. We review state and regional gaps already recognized in planning for scarcity in PC and hospice services during this pandemic and describe the planning initiatives Colorado has developed to address potential scarcities for this vulnerable and diverse group of people. We hope to encourage other state and regional groups to anticipate needs in the coming surges of this pandemic or in public health crises to come. Such planning is key to avoid the degradation of care that may result if it is necessary to invoke crisis standards of care and ration these essential services to our communities.


Assuntos
COVID-19 , Cuidados Paliativos na Terminalidade da Vida , Hospitais para Doentes Terminais , Colorado , Cuidados Críticos , Humanos , Cuidados Paliativos , Pandemias , SARS-CoV-2
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