Your browser doesn't support javascript.
loading
Mostrar: 20 | 50 | 100
Resultados 1 - 8 de 8
Filtrar
Mais filtros

Base de dados
Tipo de documento
Intervalo de ano de publicação
1.
Curr Oncol ; 31(2): 672-684, 2024 01 24.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38392043

RESUMO

In the advanced cancer setting, low psychological functioning is a common symptom and its deleterious impact on health outcomes is well established. Yet, the beneficial role of positive psychological well-being (PPWB) on several clinical conditions has been demonstrated. Early palliative care (EPC) is a recent value-based model consisting of the early integration of palliative care into standard care for solid tumors and hematologic malignancies. While the late palliative care primary offers short-term interventions, predominantly pharmacological in nature and limited to physical symptom reduction, EPC has the potential to act over a longer term, enabling specific interventions aimed at promoting PPWB. This narrative review examines nine English studies retrieved from MEDLINE/PubMed, published up to October 2023, focusing on EPC and three dimensions of PPWB: hope, gratitude, and death acceptance. These dimensions consistently emerge in our clinical experience within the EPC setting for advanced cancer patients and appear to contribute to its clinical efficacy. The choice of a narrative review reflects the novelty of the topic, the limited existing research, and the need to incorporate a variety of methodological approaches for a comprehensive exploration.


Assuntos
Neoplasias Hematológicas , Neoplasias , Humanos , Cuidados Paliativos , Bem-Estar Psicológico , Neoplasias/terapia , Neoplasias/psicologia
2.
Front Public Health ; 11: 1092145, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36950093

RESUMO

Introduction: Cancer patients and their caregivers have substantial unmet needs, that negatively impact the clinical outcome and quality of life. However, interventions aimed to address such needs are still suboptimal, failing to answer the recent healthcare call for the adoption of value-based models of care. In the case of incurable oncologic and hematologic cancers, a value-based model of care should plan advanced care on patients' needs and include the quality of death as an outcome. The integration of early palliative care into standard oncologic care for patients with advanced cancers represents a recent innovative model of assistance whose benefits for patients and caregivers are now widely recognized. The key elements underlying the reasons behind these benefits are the multidisciplinary collaboration (teamwork), an honest and empathetic communication between the early palliative care team, the patient, and the caregiver (rapport building), and the ability to detect changes in the physical/psychosocial wellbeing of the patient, along the whole disease trajectory (constant monitoring). Methods: This community case study documents the quantitative and qualitative results of a long term clinical and research experience in delivering early palliative care service to address both solid and blood cancer patients' and their primary caregivers' needs. Results: Data showed decreased use of chemotherapy, blood transfusions and referral to intensive care units near the end of life; increased life expectancy; improved symptom burden and mood; increased frequency of goals-of-care and advanced care planning conversations. Hope perception among bereaved caregivers was associated with resilience and realistic expectations raising from honest communication with the early palliative care team and appreciation toward the model. Patients and caregivers perceived the possibility of a good death as realistic and not as an unlikely event as it was for patients and caregivers on standard oncologic care only. Gratitude expressions toward the model and the team were frequently identified in their reports and positively associated with communication and spirituality. Conclusions: These findings are discussed in the context of an updated literature review regarding value-based care and suggest that early palliative care integrated into standard oncology care may be considered as an effective model of value-based care.


Assuntos
Neoplasias Hematológicas , Neoplasias , Humanos , Cuidados Paliativos/métodos , Cuidados Paliativos/psicologia , Cuidadores/psicologia , Qualidade de Vida/psicologia , Neoplasias/terapia , Neoplasias Hematológicas/terapia
3.
Front Oncol ; 13: 1213906, 2023.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37781192

RESUMO

Introduction: Early palliative care (EPC) improves the quality of life (QoL) of advanced cancer patients and their caregivers. The increasingly widespread use of this care model requires the development of measures supporting its interventions. Although the construct of patient's QoL has been extensively investigated and several QoL measures have been further validated, there is a paucity of data concerning the QoL of the caregiver. In 2018, McDonald and colleagues addressed this issue by interviewing 23 primary caregivers of advanced cancer patients who participated in an EPC randomized clinical trial to understand their perspective on the QoL construct. The Authors identified six major dimensions associated with the construct of caregiver's QoL. The present retrospective study aimed to validate these dimensions on a larger sample and in a real-life EPC setting. Methods: Previously collected reports from 137 primary caregivers of advanced cancer patients on EPC answering questions about their experience with this care model were qualitatively analyzed through a deductive, thematic approach to identify and confirm the six dimensions constituting the construct of interest based on McDonald's and colleagues' results. Results: The six dimensions ("living in the patient's world", "burden of illness and caregiving", "assuming the caregiver role", "renegotiating relationships", "confronting mortality", and "maintaining resilience") were consistently found in the reports from primary caregivers in a real-life EPC setting, confirming to be significant themes associated to their QoL. Conclusion: A definite and recurrent construct of primary caregiver's QoL as described by McDonald and colleagues was also found in a larger sample and in a real-life EPC setting. Thus it may lay the groundwork for the development of a dedicated questionnaire.

4.
Cancers (Basel) ; 15(14)2023 Jul 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37509317

RESUMO

The early referral to palliative care (PC) represents a successful value-based model with proven benefits regarding the quality of life and clinical outcomes for advanced cancer patients and their caregivers. Yet, its provision remains typically confined to the last weeks of life as per the historical, late PC model. The stigma according to which PC represents end-of-life care has been identified as the root of the problem. To explore the presence and effects of the stigma in a clinical context, we surveyed 78 patients and 110 caregivers (mean age: 71.7 and 60.7, respectively) on early PC to study what their perception of PC was before their direct experience. The responses were analyzed through a qualitative descriptive approach. The participants explicitly mentioned a lack of knowledge about PC (53% of the sample), which they identified also among physicians and the population (13%); an identification of PC with the late PC model (53%); and a detrimental reaction to the proposal of an early PC referral (83%). However, the participants explicitly mentioned that a direct experience of early PC allowed for an acquired awareness of early PC meaning and benefits (52%), as well as a comprehension of its differences with late PC (34%); the regret for the delayed referral (8%); the perception of the word "palliative" as a barrier (21%); and the belief that early PC should be part of the cancer routine practice (25%). A comprehensive multi-level intervention is necessary for a widespread understanding of the essence of anticipated PC.

5.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37751995

RESUMO

OBJECTIVES: Although early palliative care (EPC) is beneficial in acute myeloid leukaemia, little is known about EPC value in multiple myeloma (MM). We compared quality indicators for palliative and end-of-life (EOL) care in patients with MM receiving EPC with those of patients who received usual haematological care (UHC). METHODS: This observational, retrospective study was based on 290 consecutive patients with MM. The following indicators were abstracted: providing psychological support, assessing/managing pain, discussing goals of care, promoting advance care plan, accessing home care services; no anti-MM treatment within 14 and 30 days and hospice length of stay >7 days before death; no cardiopulmonary resuscitation, no intubation, <2 hospitalisations and emergency department visits within 30 days before death. Comparisons were performed using unadjusted and confounder-adjusted regression models. RESULTS: 55 patients received EPC and 231 UHC. Compared with UHC patients, EPC patients had a significantly higher number of quality indicators of care (mean 2.62±1.25 vs 1.12±0.95; p<0.0001)); a significant reduction of pain intensity over time (p<0.01) and a trend towards reduced aggressiveness at EOL, with the same survival (5.3 vs 5.46 years; p=0.74)). CONCLUSIONS: Our data support the value of integrating EPC into MM routine practice and lay the groundwork for future prospective comparative studies.

6.
Front Oncol ; 12: 991250, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36353529

RESUMO

Objective: A cancer diagnosis represents a unique trauma, given its life-threatening, multidimensional, and uncertain nature. Gratitude is a construct representing the emotional state that arises when individuals recognize that a benefit has been received as a result of someone else's action or a spiritual entity's intervention. Based on the positive psychological wellbeing, gratitude has been associated with improved health outcomes even in the disease setting. Thus, the models of care that foster gratitude should be adopted in the clinical context. This study aims to explore whether and how gratitude may originate in patients with advanced cancer and their caregivers undergoing early palliative care (EPC). Methods: We analyzed 251 reports from 133 patients and 118 caregivers describing their clinical experience in two EPC units. The sources of gratitude were identified and ranked based on their frequencies. Words expressing gratitude and words referring to communication and spirituality were collected by means of the Linguistic Inquiry and Word Count software and correlated. Results: In total, 123 (92.5%) of 133 patients' and 97 (82.2%) of 118 caregivers' reports, respectively, included explicit or implicit expressions of gratitude. Gratitude was associated specifically with successful physical symptom management, emotional support, improved attitude toward death, better information, humanity, and the familiar environment. The use of words of gratitude in patients' reports was positively correlated with the use of words referring to communication (r = .215, p = .026) and spirituality (r = .612, p <.001). Conclusion: Our results suggest that interventions within the EPC model based on doctor-patient-caregiver communication may allow patients and caregivers to experience a feeling of gratitude, and this may represent a resource to be exploited to improve their physical and psychosocial wellbeing.

7.
Cureus ; 13(3): e14139, 2021 Mar 27.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33927941

RESUMO

A previously healthy 26-year-old male was referred to our hospital for fever occurring after getting a tattoo on the left leg. At the emergency department, he was promptly diagnosed with sepsis and necrotizing fasciitis of the left leg. The patient was empirically treated with vancomycin and piperacillin/tazobactam. Blood cultures identified Streptococcus pyogenes. Necrotizing fasciitis required acute surgery. The patient survived as a result of an early clinical diagnosis and surgical intervention. We report the first case of sepsis and severe soft tissue infection, after legal tattooing, which required fasciotomy. All previously reported cases have been about necrotizing fasciitis in young males who received traditional Samoan tattooing, a practice usually realized with handmade tools. In our patient, the tattoo, created in Samoan style, was performed in an authorized center by a professional tattooist using contemporary sanitary techniques.

8.
Assist Inferm Ric ; 27(2): 77-84, 2008.
Artigo em Italiano | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18630491

RESUMO

AIM: To assess the effectiveness of a nurse-led protocol for the management of hypo/ hyperglicaemia in a medical ward. METHODS: Protocols for standard therapy, and parenteral intensive insulin therapy for severe hypo/hyperglycaemia in hospitalised patients were implemented. PERIOD: march-november 2007. RESULTS: 189 patients (19%) were labelled as "hyperglycaemic" at admission in Emergency Department. Median (+/-IQR) age was 77 (70-84) years, 41% were men, with known diabetes 74%, 18% had skin ulcers. Median glycaemia at admission was 144.5 (98-220) mg/dl. Thirty-six percent of patients was euglycaemic (60-126 mg/dl), 3% hypoglycaemic (<60 mg/dl). The glicaemic values ranged from 127-140 mg/dl (9% patients), from 141-280 mg/dl, (40%patients) and > 280 mg/dl (12% patients). The glicaemic values of the 14 patients requiring the intravenous intensive insulin regimen remained in a safe range (80-250 mg/dl) in the first 15 hours from the infusion start. No patient experienced a life-threatening hypoglycaemia nor hypoglycaemic coma. After three days on standard therapy, glicaemic levels were acceptable: 142 (98-185) pre-breakfast, 144(107-200) pre-lunch, 131 (102-190) pre-dinner, 183 (123-230) mg/dl postprandial. CONCLUSION: Data showed the effectiveness and safety of a nurse-led protocol for the care of hyperglicaemia in a medical ward.


Assuntos
Hiperglicemia/tratamento farmacológico , Hiperglicemia/enfermagem , Avaliação em Enfermagem , Idoso , Idoso de 80 Anos ou mais , Feminino , Hospitalização , Humanos , Masculino
SELEÇÃO DE REFERÊNCIAS
DETALHE DA PESQUISA