7.2 Palliative Care

Characteristics of Palliative Care

The aim of palliative care is to enhance quality of life and promote patient dignity (Ho et al., 2017). Its defining principles include controlling physical symptoms and supporting psychological and spiritual needs. These services are delivered by multidisciplinary teams of experts and can take place in a hospital, hospice, and at home (see next Chapter section). Although often thought to be a service only for the dying, palliative care is not only about end-of-life care (Covenant Health Canada, 2019; Collins, 2017; Health Canada, 2018).

Palliative Care Efforts Focus On:

  • Improving quality of living and dying
  • Placing patient values and wishes at the forefront of treatment considerations
  • Managing stress
  • Comforting patients
  • Treating and controlling symptoms
  • Reducing pain and suffering
  • Mitigating the consequences of a disease
  • Providing psychological, social, emotional, spiritual, and practical support for patients and their families

(Covenant Health Canada, 2019; Health Canada, 2018).

 
VIDEO: In-home Palliative Care – Marie’s Story

In this video Marie tells the story of how/why she and her husband Doug (diagnosed with stage 4 lung cancer) chose in-home palliative care as Doug’s end-of-life care option.


 Click the link below to learn more about palliative care: 

10 Myths About Palliative Care


VIDEO:
What Really Matters at The End of Life

In the following TED talk Dr. B.J. Miller, a hospice and palliative medicine physician, talks about how he aims to create dignified, graceful, end-of-life experiences for his patients.

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On Death & Dying (2nd Edition) Copyright © 2024 by Jacqueline Lewis is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.

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