Palliative care Flashcards
Describe the national importance plans of palliative care in Scotland.
– Living and Dying well- 2008 - updates 2011 and 2012
– Scottish Government Quality strategy- 2020 vision
(Palliative and End of Life Care Strategic Framework for Action)
Describe the national importance plans of palliative care in England.
– End of life care strategy 2008
– Everyone Counts: Planning for Patients 2014/15 to 2018/19
(Actions for End of Life Care: 2014-16)
Describe the national importance plans of palliative care in Wales.
– Together for Health – End of Life Delivery Plan 2013
Describe palliative care.
Palliative care is an approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the problem associated with life-threatening illness through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual
How does the GMC define end of life?
‘Approaching the end of life’
– likely to die within the next 12 months
Those facing imminent death and those with:
– Advanced, progressive, incurable conditions
– General frailty (likely to die in 12 months)
– At risk of dying from sudden crisis of condition
– Life threatening conditions caused by sudden catastrophic events
What are the key themes for development in palliative care?
- Early identification of patients who may need palliative care
- Advance/anticipatory care planning (including decisions regarding cardiopulmonary resuscitation (DNACPR))
- Care in last days/hours of life
- Delivery of effective and timely care
What are the aims of palliative care?
- Whole person approach
- Focus on quality of life, including good symptom control
- Care encompassing the person with the life- threatening illness and those that matter to them
What are the principles of good end of life care?
- Open lines of communication
- Anticipating care needs and encouraging discussion
- Effective multidisciplinary team input
- Symptom control – physical and psycho-spiritual
- Preparing for death - patient and family
- Providing support for relatives both before and after death
Describe generalist palliative care.
Integral part of the routine
care delivered by all health and social care professionals to those living with a progressive and incurable disease, whether at home, in a care home, or in hospital
Describe specialist palliative care.
Based on the same principles of palliative care, but can help people with more complex palliative care needs
Describe the multidisciplinary team.
- Specialist nurses (macmillan, community, hospice, other)
- Palliative care doctors
- GP
- Secondary care (non-palliative teams)
- District nurses
- Occupational therapists
- Dieticians
- Physiotherapists
- Counsellors
- Chaplain etc…
Describe the symptoms of end of life.
Physical – Pain – Dyspnoea – Nausea/vomiting – Anorexia / weight loss – Constipation – Fatigue – Cough etc, etc... Psycho-spiritual Medical / surgical emergencies
Describe the characteristics of pain.
- Can be multifactorial
- Most patients have more than one pain
- Background/ Breakthrough/Incident pain
- Physical causes:
– Cancer related (85%)
– Treatment related
– Associated factors-cancer and debility
– Unrelated to cancer - Overlap of physical/ psycho-spiritual causes
Describe bone pain.
Worse on pressure or stressing bone / weight bearing
Describe nerve pain (neuropathic).
Burning/shooting/tingling/jagging/altered sensation
Describe liver pain.
Hepatomegaly/right upper quadrant tenderness
Describe raised intracranial pressure pain.
Headache (and/or nausea) worse with lying down, often present in the morning