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Care at the Close of Life: Evidence and Experience (Jama Evidence Series)
McPhee, S. — Winker, M. — Rabow, M. — Pantilat, S. — Markowitz, A.
1ª Edición Noviembre 2010
Inglés
Tapa blanda
616 pags
1362 gr
22 x 28 x 2 cm
ISBN 9780071637954
Editorial MCGRAW HILL
LIBRO IMPRESO
-5%
119,60 €113,62 €IVA incluido
115,00 €109,25 €IVA no incluido
Recíbelo en un plazo de
2 - 3 semanas
Description
From one of the world’s leading medical journals comes the definitive evidence-based, full-color guide to end-of-life and palliative care
Features
- Fully revised and updated text with new evidence and references, including the search methodology for each chapter’s update
- Evidence-based orientation presents the current state of knowledge in the care of terminally ill patients and support for their families and caregivers
- Practical clinical guidance and approaches from international experts in palliative care
- Self-assessment Q&A, for reinforcing your knowledge of each chapter’s content and for preparing for exams
- A useful Glossary of acronyms, terms, and tests
- Updated Resources for each chapter offer current, authoritative sources of diagnostic and treatment information that can help you optimize palliative care
- Medline PubMed ID numbers facilitate quick, convenient access to references
"...represents an important milestone in the evolution of care for people with advanced disease--for which its editors and authors and JAMA should be rightly proud. It is wonderful that JAMA had the foresight to publish a series on this topic, which, as medicine has become more technologically advanced and subspecialized, is often overlooked and, sometimes worse, avoided....this book will be invaluable for front-line clinicians, and indeed all health care practitioners-as care at the close of life is a part of almost all of medicine’s specialties and settings."--Irene J. Higginson, BMBS, PhD, FPPHM, FRCP; Dept. of Palliative Care, Policy, & Rehabilitation; Cicely Saunders Institute; King's College London (from the foreword)
A new addition to the JAMAevidence series, Care at the Close of Life: Evidence and Experience offers evidence-based and clinical expert guidance on caring for patients with life-limiting illness, incorporating the words and perspectives of affected patients, their families, and treating clinicians.
Organized by these actual clinical cases, the book is based on the acclaimed 7-year series of 42 articles, originally published in JAMA as “Perspectives on Care at the Close of Life” and now thoroughly updated as chapters and featuring extensive never-before-published material. Care at the Close of Life covers are a wide range of clinical syndromes, disease processes, communication challenges, health-care delivery settings, and issues faced by patients, including withdrawal of dialysis and other life-sustaining measures, cross-cultural approaches, and the role of chemotherapy. Throughout the book, emphasis is on the principles of palliative care, with the patient and family at the center of care, and with attention given to all problems-physical, psychological, social, and spiritual.
Reflecting this focus, each chapter begins with a patient case study to introduce the clinical problem, followed by “perspectives” that draw on extensive, real-world dialogue between clinicians, patients, and families. Internationally renowned authors then review the typical challenges illustrated by the case, offering state-of-the-art, evidence-based assessment and treatment approaches.
About the Authors
Stephen J. McPhee, MD
  Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, 
  CA
  Margaret A. Winker, MD
  JAMA, Chicago, IL
  Michael W. Rabow, MD
  Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, 
  CA
  Steven Z. Pantilat, MD
  Department of Medicine, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, 
  CA
  Amy J. Markowitz, JD
  University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA
Table of Contents
Contributors
  Foreword, Irene J. Higginson, BMBS, PhD, FFPHM, FRCP
  Preface
  Acknowledgments
  A. COMMUNICATION ISSUES
  1. Initiating End-of-Life Discussions with Seriously Ill Patients: Addressing 
  the "Elephant in the Room," Timothy E. Quill, MD
  2. Beyond Advance Directives: Importance of Communication Skills for Care at 
  the End of Life, James A. Tulsky, MD
  3. Decision Making at a Time of Crisis Near the End of Life, David E. Weissman, 
  MD
  4. Dealing With Conflict in Caring for the Seriously Ill: “It Was Just 
  Out of the Question,” Anthony L. Black, MD; and Robert M. Arnold, MD
  B. SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT
  5. Managing an Acute Pain Crisis in a Patient With Advanced Cancer: “This 
  Is as Much of a Crisis as a Code,” Natalie Moryl, MD; Nessa Coyle, NP, 
  PhD; Kathleen M. Foley, MD
  6. Management of Dyspnea in Patients With Far-Advanced Lung Disease: “Once 
  I Lose It, It’s Kind of Hard to Catch It…,” John M. Luce, 
  MD; Judith A. Luce, MD
  7. Management of Intractable Nausea and Vomiting in Patients at the End of Life: 
  “I Was Feeling Nauseous All of the Time… Nothing Was Working,” 
  Gordon J. Wood, MD; Joseph W. Shega, MD; Beth Lynch, NP; Jamie H. von Roenn, 
  MD
  8. Palliative Care for Frail Older Adults: “There Are Things I Can’t 
  Do Anymore That I Wish I Could…,” Kenneth S. Boockvar, MD, MS; Diane 
  E. Meier, MD
  9. Palliative Management of Fatigue at the Close of Life: “It Feels Like 
  My Body Is Just Worn Out,” Sriram Yennurajalingam, MD; Eduardo Bruera, 
  MD
  10. Spinal Cord Compression in Patients With Advanced Metastatic Cancer: “All 
  I Care About Is Walking and Living My Life," Janet L. Abraham, MD; Michael 
  B. Bannffy, MD; Mitchel B. Harris, MD
  11. Agitation and Delirium at the End of Life: “We Couldn’t Manage 
  Him," William Breitbart, MD; Yesnea Alici, MD
  C. DISEASE MANAGEMENT
  12. Alzheimer Disease: “It’s OK, Mama, If You Want to Go, It’s 
  OK,” Ann C. Hurley, RN, DNSc; Ladislav Volicer, MD, PhD
  13. Practical Considerations in Dialysis Withdrawal: “To Have That Option 
  Is a Blessing,” Lewis M. Cohen, MD; Michael J. Germain, MD; David M. Poppel, 
  MD
  14. Overcoming the False Dichotomy of Curative vs. Palliative Care for Late-Stage 
  HIV/AIDS: “Let Me Live the Way I Want to Live, Until I Can’t,” 
  Peter A. Selwyn, MD, MPH; Marshall Forstein, MD
  15. Palliative Care for Patients With Heart Failure, Steven Z. Pantilat, MD; 
  Anthony E. Steimle, MD
  16. Integrating Palliative Care for Liver Transplant Candidates: “Too 
  Well for Transplant, Too Sick for Life,” Anne M. Larson, MD; J. Randall 
  Curtis, MD, MPH
  17. Palliative Care for Patients With Amyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis: “Prepare 
  for the Worst and Hope for the Best,” Hiroshi Mitsumoto, MD, DSc; Judith 
  G. Rabkin, PhD, MPH
  18. Palliative Care for Patients With Head and Neck Cancer: “I Would Like 
  a Quick Return to a Normal Lifestyle," Nathan E. Goldstein, MD; Eric Genden, 
  MD; R. Sean Morrison, MD
  D. OTHER PATIENT MANAGEMENT ISSUES
  19. Complexities in Prognostication in Advanced Cancer: “To Help Them 
  Live Their Lives the Way They Want," Elizabeth B. Lamont, MD, MS; Nicholas 
  A. Christakis, MD, PhD, MPH
  20. Caring for the Child With Cancer at the Close of Life: “There Are 
  People Who Make It, and I’m Hoping I’m One of Them," Craig 
  A. Hurwitz, MD; Janet Duncan, MSN, CPNP; Joanne Wolfe, MD, MPH
  21. Sudden Traumatic Death in Children: “We Did Everything, But Your Child 
  Didn’t Survive," Robert D. Truog, MD; Grace Christ, DSW; David M. 
  Browning, MSW; Elaine C. Meyer, PhD, RN
  22. The Role of Chemotherapy at the End of Life: “When Is Enough, Enough?" 
  Sarah E. Harrington, MD; Thomas J. Smith, MD
  23. Palliative Care in the Final Days of Life: “They Were Expecting It 
  at Any Time,” James Hallenbeck, MD
  E. PSYCHOLOGICAL, SOCIAL, AND SPIRITUAL ISSUES
  24. Psychological Considerations, Growth, and Transcendence at the End of Life: 
  The Art of the Possible, Susan D. Block, MD
  25. Caring for Bereaved Patients: “All the Doctors Just Suddenly Go,” 
  Holly Gwen Prigerson, PhD; Selby C. Jacobs, MD, MPH
  26. Adolescent Grief: “It Never Really Hit Me… Until It Actually 
  Happened,” Grace H. Christ, DSW; Karolynn Siegel, PhD; Adolph E. Christ, 
  MD, DrMSc
  27. Dignity-Conserving Care--A New Model for Palliative Care: Helping the Patient 
  Feel Valued, Harvey Max Chochinov, MD, PhD, FRSC
  28. Physician Opportunities to Support Family Caregivers at the End of Life: 
  “They Don’t Know What They Don’t Know,” Michael W. Rabow, 
  MD; Joshua M. Hauser, MD; Jocelia Adams, MD
  29. Spiritual Issues in the Care of Dying Patients: “…It’s 
  OK Between Me and God," Daniel P. Sulmasy, OFM, MD, PhD
  F. ETHICAL ISSUES
  30. Responding to Requests for Physician-Assisted Suicide: “These Are 
  Uncharted Waters for Both of Us…," Paul B. Bascom, MD; Susan W. Tolle, 
  MD
  31. Palliative Sedation in Dying Patients: “We Turn to It When Everything 
  Else Hasn’t Worked,” Bernard Lo, MD; Gordon Rubenfeld, MD, MSc
  G: CROSS-CULTURAL AND SPECIAL POPULATIONS ISSUES
  32. Negotiating Cross-Cultural Issues at the End of Life: “You Got to 
  Go Where He Lives,” Marjorie Kagawa-Singer, PhD, MA, MN, RN; Leslie J. 
  Blackhall, MD, MTS
  33. Palliative Care for Latino Patients and Their Families: “Whenever 
  We Prayed, She Wept," Alexander K. Smith, MD, MS, MPH; Rebecca L. Sudore, 
  MD; Eliseo J. Pérez-Stable, MD
  34. End-of-Life Care for Homeless Patients: “She Says She Is There to 
  Help Me in Any Situation,” Margot B. Kushel, MD; Christine Miaskowski, 
  RN, PhD
  35. Palliative Care for Prison Inmates: “Don’t Let Me Die in Prison," 
  John F. Linder, MSW, LCSW; Frederick J. Meyers, MD
  H: SETTINGS FOR CARE (Structural Issues)
  36. The Role of Hospice and Other Services: Serving Patients Who May Die Soon 
  and Their Families, Joanne Lynn, MD, MS
  37. Secondary and Tertiary Palliative Care in Hospitals, Charles F. van Gunten, 
  MD, PhD
  38. Withdrawal of Life Support: Intensive Caring at the End of Life, Thomas 
  J. Prendergast, MD; Kathleen A. Puntillo, RN, DNSc
  39. Meeting Palliative Care Needs in Post-Acute Care Settings: “To Help 
  Them Live Until They Die,” Laura C. Hanson, MD, MPH; Mary Ersek, PhD, 
  RN
  40. Referring a Patient and Family to High-Quality Palliative Care at the Close 
  of Life: “We Met a New Personality… With This Level of Compassion 
  and Empathy," Joan M. Teno, MD, MS; Stephen R. Connor, PhD
  I. CLINICIAN SELF-CARE
  41. Care of the Dying Doctor: On the Other End of the Stethoscope, Erik Fromme, 
  MD; J. Andrew Billings, MD
  42. Self-Care of Physicians Caring for Patients at the End of Life: “Being 
  Connected… A Key to My Survival,” Michael K. Kearney, MD; Radhule 
  B. Weininger, MD, PhD; Mary L. S. Vachon, RN, PhD; Richard L. Harrison, PhD; 
  Balfour M. Mount, MD
  Answers to Chapter Questions
  Glossary
  Index
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