Palliative Care Nursing: Principles And Evidence For Practice
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Description:
'It has been a true pleasure to have had the opportunity to peruse the second edition of 'Palliative Care Nursing'...This book, authored predominately by UK-based experts, succeeds in presenting sophisticated thoughts in readily accessible language! Each chapter begins with a summary of key points, with both classic and new relevant literature well integrated into the text. I ...
'It has been a true pleasure to have had the opportunity to peruse the second edition of 'Palliative Care Nursing'...This book, authored predominately by UK-based experts, succeeds in presenting sophisticated thoughts in readily accessible language! Each chapter begins with a summary of key points, with both classic and new relevant literature well integrated into the text. I ...
Description:
'It has been a true pleasure to have had the opportunity to peruse the second edition of 'Palliative Care Nursing'...This book, authored predominately by UK-based experts, succeeds in presenting sophisticated thoughts in readily accessible language! Each chapter begins with a summary of key points, with both classic and new relevant literature well integrated into the text. I have also been particularly impressed with the editors' final chapter, in which they synthesize a number of crucial issues for the future development of palliative care! this second edition makes a significant contribution to both the palliative care literature as well as to nursing literature' - Carol Tishelman, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. 'I find 'Palliative Care Nursing' a very attractive book for nurses but also for other disciplines to learn about nursing and to learn about palliative care. The book is voluminous, informative and educationally well constructed. Frameworks and models in this book will give nurses the opportunity to make up their own process to offer support and be a carer for the incurably ill person and his/her family as a skilled companion. This book gives the possibility for nurses to spread one clear voice about palliative care nursing. Congratulations to all the authors' - Martine De Vlieger, Palliatieve Hulpverlening Antwerpen v.z.w., University of Antwerp, Belgium. 'This book should be compulsory reading for nurses and other health care workers who are involved in the care of people in the final stages of life. It provides a comprehensive account of the major issues (clinical, professional, sociological and political) that confront contemporary palliative care while also offering strategies to move forward. The 'real world' of palliative care is described and critiqued and the rhetoric is dispensed with. This book is a vital resource for nursing practice, learning and teaching' - Associate Professor, Peter Hudson (RN, PhD). Director of the Centre for Palliative Care Research and Education, St Vincent's Hospital and The University of Melbourne, Australia. 'This is an excellent book for anyone completing either an academic qualification or who wants to understand the who, what and where of palliative care both in the UK and abroad. Its detail is balanced with case studies and practical illustrations that bring the academic nature of its writing to life...For reference purposes for anyone completing academic work it has to be an absolute must' - 'Nursing Times'. 'The book is very user friendly with key points outlined at the beginning of each chapter and a comprehensive list of further reading and references at the end. Although the writing is easily accessible the concepts and theories are thought provoking' - Jean Buchanan, Community Liaison sister, Sheffield. The second edition of this innovative textbook has been extensively revised and updated to reflect new global developments in palliative care. This textbook reviews current research and examines the evidence base for palliative care policy and practice. Over a third of the chapters are newly commissioned from leading international contributors. Building on the widely acclaimed original edition, the textbook focuses on palliative care for adults in a variety of care environments. The first three sections use a novel framework - the trajectory of life-limiting illness - to cover key issues including: what happens to people as they become ill; how individuals cope as they near death and are dying; how families and friends deal with bereavement and loss; and, the final section addresses contemporary issues in nursing and inter-professional working. The book is written with helpful overviews and in an informative and reader-friendly style. There are numerous examples of clinical situations and research studies which are examined in depth to illustrate debates in palliative care. The textbook spans the range of end-of-life contexts which are of relevance to practitioners, educationalists and researchers. 'Palliative Care Nursing' is essential reading for post-qualification nursing students and all nurses and health and social care professionals who provide care to people with advanced illness and those who are near the end of life. This broad ranging critical text will be invaluable to students and practitioners working with people and their families near the end of life.
Table of Contents:
Contributors Acknowledgements Foreword Philip Larkin Introduction Sheila Payne, Jane Seymour and Christine Ingleton PART ONE Encountering Illness 1 Encountering Illness - Overview Sheila Payne and Jane Seymour 2 History and culture in the rise of palliative care David Clark 3 Involving or using? User involvement in palliative care Tony Stevens 4 Referral patterns and access to specialist care Julia Addington-Hall 5 Dying: places and preferences Carol Thomas 6 An uncertain journey -- coping with transitions, survival and recurrence Margaret O'Connor 7 Communication: patient and family Sue Duke and Christopher Bailey 8 Clinical assessment and measurement Michael Bennett and Jose Closs 9 Adapting complementary therapies for palliative care Ann Carter and Peter Mackereth PART TWO Transitions into the terminal phase 10 Transitions into the terminal phase - Overview Jane Seymour and Christine Ingleton 11 Good for the soul? The spiritual dimension of hospice and palliative care Michael Wright 12 Working with difficult symptoms Jessica Corner 13 Pain: theories, evaluation and management Silvia Paz and Jane Seymour 14 Balancing feelings and cognitions Mari Lloyd-Williams and John Hughes 15 Psychiatric aspects of palliative care Matthew Hotopf and Will Lee 16 Working with family caregivers in a palliative care setting Paula Smith and Julie Skilbeck 17 Personhood and identity in palliative care Jenny Hockey 18 No way in: including disadvantaged population and patients at the end of life Jonathan Koffman and Margaret Camps 19 Treatment decisions at the end of life -- a conceptual framework Bert Broeckaert 20 Palliative care in institutions Jeanne Samson Katz PART THREE Loss and bereavement 21 Loss and bereavement - Overview Sheila Payne 22 Nursing care at the time of death Carol Komaromy 23 The care and support of bereaved people Mark Cobb 24 Risk assessment and adult bereavement services Marilyn Relf 25 Bereavement support services David Kissane 26 Helping children and families facing bereavement in palliative care settings Liz Rolls PART FOUR Contemporary issues 27 Contemporary issues - Overview Christine Ingleton and Jane Seymour 28 Professional boundaries in palliative care Karen Cox and Veronica James 29 The cost of caring -- surviving the culture of niceness, occupational stress and coping strategies Sanchia Aranda 30 Education and scholarship in palliative care: a European nursing perspective Philip Larkin 31 Information and communications technology (ICT) in palliative care Peter Bath, Barbara Sen and Kendra Albright 32 Research in palliative care Gunn Grande and Christine Ingleton 33 Practice Development in Palliative Care Katherine Froggatt and Mary Turner 34 Policy and palliative care Jo Hockley 35 Palliative care in resource-poor countries Jennifer Hunt Conclusion Sheila Payne, Jane Seymour and Christine Ingleton
Author Biography:
Sheila Payne is Help the Hospices Chair in Hospice Studies at Lancaster University, UK. She is an applied social scientist with a background in nursing and an experienced researcher and textbook author. Jane Seymour is Sue Ryder Care Professor of Palliative and End of Life Studies and head of the Sue Ryder Care Centre for Palliative and End of Life Studies at the University of Nottingham, UK. Christine Ingleton is Reader in Palliative and End-of-Life Care at the University of Sheffield, UK. She is also a nurse and has worked as a clinician, manager, educationalist and researcher. Contributors Julia Addington-Hall, Professor in End of Life Care, Co-Director of the NCRI-funded Cancer Experiences Supportive and Palliative Care Research Collaborative (CECo), School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK Kendra Albright, Lecturer & Deputy Director, Centre for Health Information Management Research, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK Sanchia Aranda, Professor of Nursing and Head, School of Nursing and Social Work, The University of Melbourne and Director of Cancer Nursing Research,Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Australia Christopher Bailey, Senior Research Fellow and Academic Co-ordinator, Cancer Experiences Research Collaborative, School of Nursing & Midwifery, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK Peter Bath, Senior Lecturer in Health Informatics and Director, Centre for Health Information Management Research (CHIMR), University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK Michael Bennett, Professor of Palliative Medicine, International Observatory on End of Life Care, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK Bert Broeckaert, Professor, Interdisciplinary Centre for the Study of Religion & Worldview, University Leuven, Leuven, Belgium Margaret Camps, Palliative Care Macmillan Nurse, Cancer Centre Mount Vernon Hospital, East and North Herts NHS Trust, Middlesex, UK Ann Carter, Complementary Therapy Co-ordinator, St Ann's Hospice, Manchester, UK David Clark, Professor of Medical Sociology, International Observatory on End of Life Care, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK Jose Closs, Professor of Nursing, School of Health Care, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK Reverend Mark Cobb, Clinical Director and Senior Chaplain at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Directorate of Professional Services, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield
'It has been a true pleasure to have had the opportunity to peruse the second edition of 'Palliative Care Nursing'...This book, authored predominately by UK-based experts, succeeds in presenting sophisticated thoughts in readily accessible language! Each chapter begins with a summary of key points, with both classic and new relevant literature well integrated into the text. I have also been particularly impressed with the editors' final chapter, in which they synthesize a number of crucial issues for the future development of palliative care! this second edition makes a significant contribution to both the palliative care literature as well as to nursing literature' - Carol Tishelman, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden. 'I find 'Palliative Care Nursing' a very attractive book for nurses but also for other disciplines to learn about nursing and to learn about palliative care. The book is voluminous, informative and educationally well constructed. Frameworks and models in this book will give nurses the opportunity to make up their own process to offer support and be a carer for the incurably ill person and his/her family as a skilled companion. This book gives the possibility for nurses to spread one clear voice about palliative care nursing. Congratulations to all the authors' - Martine De Vlieger, Palliatieve Hulpverlening Antwerpen v.z.w., University of Antwerp, Belgium. 'This book should be compulsory reading for nurses and other health care workers who are involved in the care of people in the final stages of life. It provides a comprehensive account of the major issues (clinical, professional, sociological and political) that confront contemporary palliative care while also offering strategies to move forward. The 'real world' of palliative care is described and critiqued and the rhetoric is dispensed with. This book is a vital resource for nursing practice, learning and teaching' - Associate Professor, Peter Hudson (RN, PhD). Director of the Centre for Palliative Care Research and Education, St Vincent's Hospital and The University of Melbourne, Australia. 'This is an excellent book for anyone completing either an academic qualification or who wants to understand the who, what and where of palliative care both in the UK and abroad. Its detail is balanced with case studies and practical illustrations that bring the academic nature of its writing to life...For reference purposes for anyone completing academic work it has to be an absolute must' - 'Nursing Times'. 'The book is very user friendly with key points outlined at the beginning of each chapter and a comprehensive list of further reading and references at the end. Although the writing is easily accessible the concepts and theories are thought provoking' - Jean Buchanan, Community Liaison sister, Sheffield. The second edition of this innovative textbook has been extensively revised and updated to reflect new global developments in palliative care. This textbook reviews current research and examines the evidence base for palliative care policy and practice. Over a third of the chapters are newly commissioned from leading international contributors. Building on the widely acclaimed original edition, the textbook focuses on palliative care for adults in a variety of care environments. The first three sections use a novel framework - the trajectory of life-limiting illness - to cover key issues including: what happens to people as they become ill; how individuals cope as they near death and are dying; how families and friends deal with bereavement and loss; and, the final section addresses contemporary issues in nursing and inter-professional working. The book is written with helpful overviews and in an informative and reader-friendly style. There are numerous examples of clinical situations and research studies which are examined in depth to illustrate debates in palliative care. The textbook spans the range of end-of-life contexts which are of relevance to practitioners, educationalists and researchers. 'Palliative Care Nursing' is essential reading for post-qualification nursing students and all nurses and health and social care professionals who provide care to people with advanced illness and those who are near the end of life. This broad ranging critical text will be invaluable to students and practitioners working with people and their families near the end of life.
Table of Contents:
Contributors Acknowledgements Foreword Philip Larkin Introduction Sheila Payne, Jane Seymour and Christine Ingleton PART ONE Encountering Illness 1 Encountering Illness - Overview Sheila Payne and Jane Seymour 2 History and culture in the rise of palliative care David Clark 3 Involving or using? User involvement in palliative care Tony Stevens 4 Referral patterns and access to specialist care Julia Addington-Hall 5 Dying: places and preferences Carol Thomas 6 An uncertain journey -- coping with transitions, survival and recurrence Margaret O'Connor 7 Communication: patient and family Sue Duke and Christopher Bailey 8 Clinical assessment and measurement Michael Bennett and Jose Closs 9 Adapting complementary therapies for palliative care Ann Carter and Peter Mackereth PART TWO Transitions into the terminal phase 10 Transitions into the terminal phase - Overview Jane Seymour and Christine Ingleton 11 Good for the soul? The spiritual dimension of hospice and palliative care Michael Wright 12 Working with difficult symptoms Jessica Corner 13 Pain: theories, evaluation and management Silvia Paz and Jane Seymour 14 Balancing feelings and cognitions Mari Lloyd-Williams and John Hughes 15 Psychiatric aspects of palliative care Matthew Hotopf and Will Lee 16 Working with family caregivers in a palliative care setting Paula Smith and Julie Skilbeck 17 Personhood and identity in palliative care Jenny Hockey 18 No way in: including disadvantaged population and patients at the end of life Jonathan Koffman and Margaret Camps 19 Treatment decisions at the end of life -- a conceptual framework Bert Broeckaert 20 Palliative care in institutions Jeanne Samson Katz PART THREE Loss and bereavement 21 Loss and bereavement - Overview Sheila Payne 22 Nursing care at the time of death Carol Komaromy 23 The care and support of bereaved people Mark Cobb 24 Risk assessment and adult bereavement services Marilyn Relf 25 Bereavement support services David Kissane 26 Helping children and families facing bereavement in palliative care settings Liz Rolls PART FOUR Contemporary issues 27 Contemporary issues - Overview Christine Ingleton and Jane Seymour 28 Professional boundaries in palliative care Karen Cox and Veronica James 29 The cost of caring -- surviving the culture of niceness, occupational stress and coping strategies Sanchia Aranda 30 Education and scholarship in palliative care: a European nursing perspective Philip Larkin 31 Information and communications technology (ICT) in palliative care Peter Bath, Barbara Sen and Kendra Albright 32 Research in palliative care Gunn Grande and Christine Ingleton 33 Practice Development in Palliative Care Katherine Froggatt and Mary Turner 34 Policy and palliative care Jo Hockley 35 Palliative care in resource-poor countries Jennifer Hunt Conclusion Sheila Payne, Jane Seymour and Christine Ingleton
Author Biography:
Sheila Payne is Help the Hospices Chair in Hospice Studies at Lancaster University, UK. She is an applied social scientist with a background in nursing and an experienced researcher and textbook author. Jane Seymour is Sue Ryder Care Professor of Palliative and End of Life Studies and head of the Sue Ryder Care Centre for Palliative and End of Life Studies at the University of Nottingham, UK. Christine Ingleton is Reader in Palliative and End-of-Life Care at the University of Sheffield, UK. She is also a nurse and has worked as a clinician, manager, educationalist and researcher. Contributors Julia Addington-Hall, Professor in End of Life Care, Co-Director of the NCRI-funded Cancer Experiences Supportive and Palliative Care Research Collaborative (CECo), School of Nursing and Midwifery, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK Kendra Albright, Lecturer & Deputy Director, Centre for Health Information Management Research, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK Sanchia Aranda, Professor of Nursing and Head, School of Nursing and Social Work, The University of Melbourne and Director of Cancer Nursing Research,Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre, Melbourne, Australia Christopher Bailey, Senior Research Fellow and Academic Co-ordinator, Cancer Experiences Research Collaborative, School of Nursing & Midwifery, University of Southampton, Southampton, UK Peter Bath, Senior Lecturer in Health Informatics and Director, Centre for Health Information Management Research (CHIMR), University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK Michael Bennett, Professor of Palliative Medicine, International Observatory on End of Life Care, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK Bert Broeckaert, Professor, Interdisciplinary Centre for the Study of Religion & Worldview, University Leuven, Leuven, Belgium Margaret Camps, Palliative Care Macmillan Nurse, Cancer Centre Mount Vernon Hospital, East and North Herts NHS Trust, Middlesex, UK Ann Carter, Complementary Therapy Co-ordinator, St Ann's Hospice, Manchester, UK David Clark, Professor of Medical Sociology, International Observatory on End of Life Care, Lancaster University, Lancaster, UK Jose Closs, Professor of Nursing, School of Health Care, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK Reverend Mark Cobb, Clinical Director and Senior Chaplain at Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Directorate of Professional Services, Royal Hallamshire Hospital, Sheffield
Autor | Payne, Sheila; Seymour, Jane; Ingleton, Christine |
---|---|
Ilmumisaeg | 2008 |
Kirjastus | Open University Press |
Köide | Pehmekaaneline |
Bestseller | Ei |
Lehekülgede arv | 736 |
Pikkus | 246 |
Laius | 246 |
Keel | English |
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