The Physician and Hospice Care is an informative overview of the roles and attitudes of physicians on the hospice staff, and the challenges they encounter in their work with terminally ill patients. An enlightening reference book, it prepares novice hospice physicians for the often demanding hospice environment by exploring issues they may encounter, such as the physician's role in hospice team management, the developing concept of palliative care and the hospice, and the changing patterns of care for the terminally ill. Hospice staff will gain valuable insights for working with physicians through examinations of doctors'attitudes about palliative care, particularly their difficulty with accepting death as the inevitable outcome of an illness. This indispensable book includes guidelines for physicians on the management of various care activities including pain and symptom management, medical ethics regarding euthanasia, recurrent life-threatening illness, home care for the terminally ill, and ethical considerations related to patient suicide.New physicians and other health care professionals in a variety of disciplines involved in the care of the dying will gain a better understanding of their own roles and contributions to hospice care from this perceptive book. Some of the important topics covered by The Physician and Hospice Care include:
collaboration between physicians and social workers
physicians'roles as educators of hospice volunteers
physicians'reactions to death
issues of hospice care for noncancer patients
house calls for terminally ill
ethical dilemmas in feeding advanced cancer patients
nonverbal communication and sexuality in dying patients
psychosocial aspects of care for end-stage lung disease
staff and family perceptions of death in hospitals
home care of the advanced cancer patientThis unique book provides sensitive guidelines for physicians and other professionals to use in their work with terminally ill patients. It is an eye-opener of tremendous value to upper level medical students, interns, residents, oncological radiotherapists, oncological subspecialists, young attending physicians in academic and private practice, hospice physicians, and all members of the hospice staff from clergy to volunteers.
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ISBN-13
978-1-56024-320-5 (9781560243205)
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Schweitzer Klassifikation
Contents I. The Role of the Physician in Hospice Care
The Responsibility of the Physician to the Terminal Patient
The Role of the Hospice Physician
The Physician as Artist and Guide
Physicians and Social Workers: Perspectives on Collaboration During the Terminal Care Phase
Hospice: Who's in Charge, and of What?
Why Physicians Should Remain Involved in Home Hospice Care
II. Physician Attitudes Toward Death, Palliative Care, and the Hospice Setting
Physicians and Death
Hospice Care for the Noncancer Patient: A Survey of Issues and Opinions
Palliative Care: Attitudes and Knowledge of Hospital-Based Nurses and Physicians
Physicians' Attitudes Toward Death and Terminally Ill Patients: A Decade After Graduation From Medical School
Attitudes of Physicians Toward Hospice, Palliative Care, Dying, and Death
III. Issues in Management of Care
The Role of the House Call in Terminal Care
Medical/Ethical Considerations in Feeding the Patient With Advanced Cancer
Neglected Issues in the Care of Dying Patients: Nonverbal Communication and Sexuality
Recurrent Life-Threatening Illness: An Approach in the Hospice Setting
End-Stage Lung Disease: A Hospice Approach to the Psychosocial Aspects of Care
Death in the Hospital: A Comparison of Staff and Family Perceptions
Management of the Advanced Cancer Patient Through Home Care
Suicide and Disease
Reference Notes Included