Communication about the ending of anticancer treatment and transition to palliative care.
about
Withdrawal of anticancer therapy in advanced disease: a systematic literature reviewSpecialist palliative care services for adults with advanced, incurable illness in hospital, hospice, or community settings--protocol for a systematic reviewImpact of a Simulation-Based Communication Workshop on Resident Preparedness for End-of-Life Communication in the Intensive Care Unit.Defending patient autonomy: the case of the challenging spouse.Personal health records as portal to the electronic medical record.How should we manage information needs, family anxiety, depression, and breathlessness for those affected by advanced disease: development of a Clinical Decision Support Tool using a Delphi design.Use of and reactions to a tailored CD-ROM designed to enhance oncologist-patient communication: the SCOPE trial intervention.Breaking Bad News in Ethnic Settings: Perspectives of Patients and Families in Northern Sri Lanka.Transition from curative to palliative care in cancer.Communication about cancer near the end of life.Deciding what information is necessary: do patients with advanced cancer want to know all the details?Burden on oncologists when communicating the discontinuation of anticancer treatment.Drugs, cancer and end-of-life care: a case study of pharmaceuticalization?Living with advanced illness: longitudinal study of patient, family, and caregiver needs.'Would you like to talk about your future treatment options'? Discussing the transition from curative cancer treatment to palliative care.Truth-telling in discussing prognosis in advanced life-limiting illnesses: a systematic review.Palliative Care, Hospice, and Advance Care Planning: Views of People Living with HIV and Other Chronic Conditions.Oncologists' strategies and barriers to effective communication about the end of life.Preferences of cancer patients regarding communication of bad news: a systematic literature review.Ethnic disparities in hospice use among Asian-American and Pacific Islander patients dying with cancer.The current status and issues regarding hospital-based specialized palliative care service in Japanese Regional Cancer Centers: a nationwide questionnaire survey.How do researchers conceive of spousal grief after cancer? A systematic review of models used by researchers to study spousal grief in the cancer context.Current state of the art and science of patient-clinician communication in progressive disease: patients' need to know and need to feel known.Aggressiveness of End-of-Life Care for Hospitalized Individuals with Cancer with and without Dementia: A Nationwide Matched-Cohort Study in France.One-year follow-up of an educational intervention for palliative care consultation teams.End-of-life care for hospitalized patients with metastatic melanoma in France: a nationwide, register-based study.Breaking bad news to cancer patients in palliative care: A comparison of national cross-sectional surveys from 2006 and 2012.Curative to palliative care-transition and communication issues: surgeons perspective.The evaluation of the relationship between the level of disclosure of cancer in terminally ill patients with cancer and the quality of terminal care in these patients and their families using the Support Team Assessment Schedule.Effectiveness of using clinical guidelines for conducting palliative care family meetings in Japan.Length of home hospice care, family-perceived timing of referrals, perceived quality of care, and quality of death and dying in terminally ill cancer patients who died at home.Priorities for treatment, care and information if faced with serious illness: a comparative population-based survey in seven European countries."Rather one more chemo than one less…": Oncologists and Oncology Nurses' Reasons for Aggressive Treatment of Young Adults with Advanced Cancer.The importance of good death components among cancer patients, the general population, oncologists, and oncology nurses in Japan: patients prefer "fighting against cancer".The glimmering embers: experiences of hope among cancer patients in palliative home care.The troubles of telling: managing communication about the end of life.'Difficult Conversations': evaluation of multiprofessional training.Family experience with difficult decisions in end-of-life care.Factors associated with patient preferences for communication of bad news.Are Bereaved Family Members Satisfied With Information Provision About Palliative Care Units in Japan?
P2860
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P2860
Communication about the ending of anticancer treatment and transition to palliative care.
description
2004 nî lūn-bûn
@nan
2004年の論文
@ja
2004年学术文章
@wuu
2004年学术文章
@zh
2004年学术文章
@zh-cn
2004年学术文章
@zh-hans
2004年学术文章
@zh-my
2004年学术文章
@zh-sg
2004年學術文章
@yue
2004年學術文章
@zh-hant
name
Communication about the ending of anticancer treatment and transition to palliative care.
@en
Communication about the ending of anticancer treatment and transition to palliative care.
@nl
type
label
Communication about the ending of anticancer treatment and transition to palliative care.
@en
Communication about the ending of anticancer treatment and transition to palliative care.
@nl
prefLabel
Communication about the ending of anticancer treatment and transition to palliative care.
@en
Communication about the ending of anticancer treatment and transition to palliative care.
@nl
P2093
P2860
P356
P1433
P1476
Communication about the ending of anticancer treatment and transition to palliative care.
@en
P2093
M Fujimori
N Nakashima
T Matsubara
T Mukaiyama
P2860
P304
P356
10.1093/ANNONC/MDH386
P577
2004-10-01T00:00:00Z