Older adults afflicted with progressive, eventually fatal, chronic illness have care needs and personal priorities that tend to focus on living well despite the disease. At this phase of life, the wish is for symptom relief, maintenance of activities, concern for family, and preparation for death and bereavement. When progressive disability marks the last months and years, the patient should remain focused on living life as fully as possible until its end. Major advances in enabling function and managing symptoms have taken place in the past decade or two. People who once would have suffered terribly from pain can now expect to be comfortable with aggressive pain and symptom management. The challenge in today's nursing practice is that nurses work in a care system that was not designed to deal with the challenges posed by large numbers of persons coming to the end of life at the same time. Nurses are not adequately prepared to provide quality, compassionate care for persons who are old, sick, and eventually dying. Matzo and Sherman's new book provides a valuable resource for practicing nurses at all levels in the health care continuum who care for older adults at the end of life. The goal of the book is to enhance quality of life for older adult patients and families who have progressive, incurable illnesses.Focuses on quality end-of-life nursing care and its impact from a palliative care perspective.Addresses active and compassionate care therapies to enhance physical, psychological, social, and spiritual domains of life.Explores the spiritual, social, and psychological aspects of key nursing competencies at the end of life and progresses to the more evidence-based information and interventions related to pain, symptom management, disease progression, and care of the dying elder.Includes Case Studies which help put the content into a more humanistic perspective.Provides Evidence-Based Practice boxes that apply current research to findings.
Gerontologic Pallative Care Nursing by Marianne Laporte Matzo and Deborah Witt Sherman (Eds.)
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 19 years ago
Both of these doctorally prepared nurse educators are fellows in the American Academy of Nursing and are involved with palliative care. There are an additional 37 contributing authors. The book has three parts and 25 chapters: Part one, Promoting Quality of Life During The Dying Process contains nine chapters: 1. Cultural and Spiritual Backgrounds of Older Adults, 2. Death and an Aging Society, 3. Community Based Pallative Care for Older Adults, 4. Pallation and End of Life Care Across Health Care Settings, 5. Ethical and Legal Aspects of Dying and Health Care Resources Allocation, 6. Communication issues in Advance Care Planning, 7. Advance Directives: Older Adults with Dementia, 8. Family Caregivers of Dying Elders: Burdens and Opportunities, and 9. Suffering, Loss, and Bereavement. Part two, Disease-Related Pallative Care Nursing has seven chapters: 10. End-Stage Heart Disease, 11. Cancer, !2. Stroke, Coma, and Brain Death, 13. Dementia and Neurodegenerative Illness, 14. End-Stage Renal Disease and Discontinuation of Dialysis, 15. Chronic Lung Disease, and 15. End-Stage Liver Disease. Part three, Symptom Management and Related Issues has nine chapters: 17. Dyspnia, 18 Anxiety, Depression, and Delirium, 19. Gastrointestinal Symptoms, 20. Fatigue, 21, Pain Assessment and Management, 22. Skin Care Needs of Pallative Care Patients, 23. Nutrition and Hydration, 24. Polypharmacy, and 25 Peri-Death Nursing Care. Most chapters start with a case study some of which contain questions for reflection and introduction, present content, and end with case study conclusions, conclusions and references most of which are from the 1990s to 2003. Chapters are clarified with boxes, figures, and tables and most have a box for evidence-based practice containing the research reference, research problem, design, sample and setting, methods, results, implications for nursing practice and conclusion. Theories such as theoretical stages and tasks of grief are presented (p. 155). Assessment tools such as physical fitness, feelings, daily activities, social activities, social support, change in health, overall health, and quality of life are included (pp. 174-175.) Peri-death Hindu, Buddhist, Islamic, Muslim, Jewish, Mormon, Cuban-American, Native American, Appalacian, Homong, Japanese, Mexican-American, and Black-American traditions are presented. This 560 page book ends with an index. The book contains 15 measurable AACN competencies required for quality care of the dying. It presents a trajectory of caring that follows the physical and mental decline of people with specific chronic diseases. Holistic interventions are emphasized. This is a particularly important book to help faculty incorporate end of life content into curricula, for students to learn what they will need to know to work with an aging population, and for any nurse working with people at the end of their life.
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