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Showing 1 to 15 of 36 results Save | Export
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Jenkins, Laura; Parry, Ruth; Pino, Marco – Applied Linguistics, 2021
As the main symptom in palliative care, pain requires careful assessment. Repeating patient answers is one recommended communication technique for helping convey to patients that they have been heard, and to encourage them to say more. We examined 23 episodes where experienced doctors repeat patients' answers with mirrored rhythm and…
Descriptors: Patients, Interpersonal Communication, Discourse Analysis, Pain
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Reglin, Gary; Bradley, Johnetta – College Student Journal, 2021
Problem was few African Americans in rural southwest Georgia took advantage of hospice care. Primary purpose was to determine beliefs of hospice nonphysician medical care providers relative to referring African American patients for hospice care. Secondary purpose was to identify cultural and other factors hindering some African American families…
Descriptors: African Americans, Rural Areas, Hospices (Terminal Care), Medical Services
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Mahendra, Nidhi; Alonso, Marian – Topics in Language Disorders, 2020
Palliative care is specialized medical care offered to persons with serious health conditions, with the goal to relieve or prevent pain and suffering, to manage burdensome symptoms, and to optimize as much as possible the quality of life of patients and their families (Institute of Medicine, 2015). Speech-language pathologists (SLPs) are not…
Descriptors: Pain, Quality of Life, Health Services, Prevention
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Burke, Shaunna; Utley, Andrea; Belchamber, Caroline; McDowall, Louise – Research Quarterly for Exercise and Sport, 2020
Purpose: Physical activity (PA) is increasingly being used in hospice care as a rehabilitation strategy to help patients manage symptoms and improve quality of life. However, little is known about how to design and deliver interventions that promote uptake and maintenance of PA in this population. Single-level approaches (i.e., psychological…
Descriptors: Physical Activities, Hospices (Terminal Care), Foreign Countries, Rehabilitation
Alexander-Gorea, Trenika – ProQuest LLC, 2017
There is an identified problem with patients receiving suboptimal pain management at a hospice agency in the northwestern United States. At this agency, undertreatment of pain is prevalent. Evidence indicates that this may be a result of a lack of guidelines, education, and knowledge of appropriate prescribing. Known barriers to the correct…
Descriptors: Hospices (Terminal Care), Patients, Drug Use, Pain
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Hanson, Laura C.; Green, Melissa A.; Hayes, Michelle; Diehl, Sandra J.; Warnock, Steven; Corbie-Smith, Giselle; Lin, Feng-Chang; Earp, Jo Anne – Health Education & Behavior, 2014
Background: Community-based peer support may help meet the practical, emotional, and spiritual needs of African Americans with advanced cancer. Support teams are a unique model of peer support for persons facing serious illness, but research is rare. This study sought to (a) implement new volunteer support teams for African Americans with advanced…
Descriptors: Health, African Americans, Social Support Groups, Cancer
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Nebel Pederson, Sarah; Emmers-Sommer, Tara M. – Death Studies, 2012
The hospice philosophy was founded on a mission to provide comprehensive and holistic services to individuals at the end of life. Hospice interdisciplinary teams work together to offer therapies such as spiritual services, comfort care, and massage therapy to meet patients' physical, psychological, emotional, and spiritual needs. Although the…
Descriptors: Hospices (Terminal Care), Interdisciplinary Approach, Patients, Biomedicine
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Waldrop, Deborah – Educational Gerontology, 2014
Decisions about treatment and options for care at the end stage of an advanced chronic illness are important determinants of the quality of a person's death and of how family members adapt in bereavement. This article describes the steps taken to secure federal funding to study how people make the decision to enroll in hospice. The National…
Descriptors: Hospices (Terminal Care), Chronic Illness, Decision Making, Federal Legislation
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Freeman, Shannon; Heckman, George; Naus, Peter J.; Marston, Hannah R. – Educational Gerontology, 2013
The need to attend to terminally ill persons and provide improved quality of living and dying should be a national priority in Canada. Hospice palliative care (HPC), a person-centered approach that addresses the needs of the whole person, improves the quality of living and dying of persons facing a life-threatening illness. To ensure Canadians are…
Descriptors: Barriers, Civil Rights, Hospices (Terminal Care), Change Strategies
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Temkin-Greener, Helena; Zheng, Nan Tracy; Mukamel, Dana B. – Gerontologist, 2012
Purpose of the study: This study examines urban-rural differences in end-of-life (EOL) quality of care provided to nursing home (NH) residents. Data and Methods: We constructed 3 risk-adjusted EOL quality measures (QMs) for long-term decedent residents: in-hospital death, hospice referral before death, and presence of severe pain. We used…
Descriptors: Hospices (Terminal Care), Community Characteristics, Municipalities, Hospitals
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Waldrop, Deborah P.; Meeker, Mary Ann – Gerontologist, 2012
Purpose: This study explored the process of decision making about hospice enrollment and identified factors that influence the timing of that decision. Methods: This study employed an exploratory, descriptive, cross-sectional design and was conducted using qualitative methods. In-depth in-person semistructured interviews were conducted with 36…
Descriptors: Identification, Chronic Illness, Decision Making, Content Analysis
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Sanders, Sara; Swails, Peggy – Social Work, 2011
Research shows that few social workers are interested in working with cognitively impaired older adults, such as those with Alzheimer's disease or a related dementia. As the number of individuals with dementia grows, the demand for social workers to provide services to patients with dementia will increase. Although much attention has been given to…
Descriptors: Hospices (Terminal Care), Alzheimers Disease, Focus Groups, Older Adults
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Patrizi, Patricia A. – New Directions for Evaluation, 2010
The author discusses an assessment of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation's work over a 20-year period to improve end-of-life care in America. The case illustrates the evolution of the strategy from one focused on a multiyear randomized control trial of a series of hospital-based interventions that produced findings of "no effects" into several…
Descriptors: Terminal Illness, Health Services, Hospices (Terminal Care), Patients
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Pruchno, Rachel; Cartwright, Francine P.; Wilson-Genderson, Maureen – International Journal of Aging and Human Development, 2009
Knowledge about the ways in which race affects decision-making at the end of life is minimal, yet this information is critical for providing culturally sensitive care at the end of life. Data matching socio-demographic characteristics of 34 black and 34 white patients with end-stage renal disease and their spouses reveal that there are no…
Descriptors: Terminal Illness, Decision Making, Context Effect, Racial Differences
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Sanders, Sara; Butcher, Howard K.; Swails, Peggy; Power, James – Death Studies, 2009
The purpose of this study was to investigate how caregivers respond to the end stages of dementia with the assistance from hospice. Data were collected from 27 family caregivers over the course of 10 months, with each caregiver being interviewed up to 4 times during the time that the patient received hospice care. Chart review data were also…
Descriptors: Hospices (Terminal Care), Dementia, Caregivers, Diseases
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