Palliative care is care improving the quality of life of patients and their families, who are facing a life-threatening condition or frailty, through prevention and relief of suffering by means of... Show morePalliative care is care improving the quality of life of patients and their families, who are facing a life-threatening condition or frailty, through prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and careful assessment, and treatment of problems of a physical, psychological, social, and spiritual nature. This thesis describes five studies that evaluated the support of clinicians not specialized in palliative care, or generalists in palliative care. The results show that generalists need education on basic palliative care principles and need support with the initiation of a palliative care approach on time, especially when they care for patients with life-limiting illness other than cancer. To have mor attention for alle problems in the physical, psychological, social and spiritual dimension of care, they can be supported with a more structured approach to the total burden of symptoms and problems. This could be achieved by supporting them with a clinical decision support system for symptom management in palliative care. Such a system can be used for every individual patient, includes a symptom predictor, and provides recommendations on treatment and referral possibilities. Show less
Boersema-Wijma, D.J.; Duijn, E. van; Heemskerk, A.W.; Steen, J.T. van der; Achterberg, W.P. 2023
BackgroundAs Huntington's disease (HD) is a progressive disease for which there is no cure yet, patients in the advanced stage of HD may benefit from palliative care.ObjectiveTo review the... Show moreBackgroundAs Huntington's disease (HD) is a progressive disease for which there is no cure yet, patients in the advanced stage of HD may benefit from palliative care.ObjectiveTo review the literature focusing on palliative care in advanced stage HD, and the level of evidence.MethodsPublications between 1993 and October 29th, 2021 from 8 databases (Embase, Web of Science, Cochrane, Emcare, PsycINFO, Academic Search Premier, PMC PubMed Central and Pubmed) were included. The literature was deductively classified based on topics that are part of the definition of palliative care, or as care-related topics that emerged from the literature. Levels of evidence I (high) - V (low) were determined as defined by the Joanna Briggs Institute.ResultsOur search resulted in 333 articles, 38 of which were included. The literature covered four domains of palliative care: physical care, psychological care, spiritual care, and social care. Four other topics in the literature were: advance care planning, end-of-life needs assessments, pediatric HD care, and need for health care services. Most literature was underpinned by a low level of evidence, except for the topics on social care (Level III-V), advance care planning (Level II-V) and end-of-life needs assessments (Level II-III).ConclusionsTo deliver adequate palliative care in advanced HD, both general and HD-specific symptoms and problems need to be addressed. As the level of evidence in existing literature is low, further research is essential to improve palliative care and to meet patient's wishes and needs. Show less
Nishimura, M.; Harrison Dening, K.; Sampson, E.L.; Iglesias de Oliveira Vidal, E.; Correia de Abreu, W.; Kaasalainen, S.; ... ; Steen, J.T. van der 2022