The Human Connection of Palliative Care: Ten Steps for What To Say and Do
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- Опубликовано: 18 фев 2013
- Dr. Diane E. Meier is Director of the Center to Advance Palliative Care (CAPC), a national organization devoted to increasing the number and quality of palliative care programs in the United States. In this video, Dr. Meier discusses 10 important steps in palliative care from over a decade of research. This video will serve as a valuable training tool and guide for medical professionals and their families.
Under her leadership the number of palliative care programs in U.S. hospitals has more than doubled in the last 5 years.
Dr. Meier, I'm a chaplain who heard your wisdom, guidance, passion for palliative care at the last CAPC conference and continues to be led and inspired by you. So often I go back to read my notes from your talks, I'm so very thankful for your life's work.
The art of palliative care is so beautiful.
Thanks for insights , caring .GOD BLESS US THROUGH YOUR SHARING
That was good information. I wish all care teams were like that.
This is my favorite #Palliative care video!
And when a person has a processing delay, the ask after the tell should wait a little longer. Thank you for this video.
So beautiful, so important so helpful - not just for doctors but for we non healthcare professionals.This is what we so desperately need - a step by step path to get through this process - including articulating that it IS a process, to be sensitive to, aware of, non verbal. Thank you Dr Meier, you are truly a gift. I feel incredibly luck to have 'found you' on twitter.
She has such a calming soul.
Very good video. I have experienced medical personnel raising the issue of hospice care and/or palliative care far before I even considered that I might die from my illnesses. Now I'm comfortable discussing, listening, learning and making end-of-life decisions.
Thank you so much. This is really helpful. As a medical health profession, I have to deal with many patients going through their terminal illness. Thank you very very much.
This is a great video. It's very well organized and very clear. I appreciate the concrete examples of how to do each step.
Excellent video! Thank you Dr. Meier for teaching on how to make a difficult conversation less uncomfortable.
a true mentor in the field! i'm grateful.
I’ve been lucky to attend conferences where she has presented!!
Great Video. Simple, concise, and informative. I would love to know more about how other positions within a palliative care team (those other than doctors) fit into the treatment of individuals facing serious or chronic illness. I would be interested in hearing about the roles social workers, nurses, pharmacists, and chaplains can play within palliative care. Links to further resources appreciated.
great video! love her serene attitude
Excellent video. A difficult process but must be followed thru. Well done. Thank you
so helpful,so needed to everyone in this world.i have liked very much
wow! such a great video! thank you so much for sharing your 10 steps. I will definitely use these strategies when talking to pts about their terminal illnesses
Great doctor!
Excellent. Thank you for sharing this vital training information.
How can we help people to achieve what give their life meaning? A good partnership and acceptance that people are the captain on their ships of their life, and compassion that acting on behalf of other's welfare can possibly get us to be effective on the helping role.
So well done. Masterful!
Amazing video.. extremely informative.
Thank you!
-Nursing student.
Wiow ! great video. Am preparing for my communication skills exam - quite useful.
Excellent, and still pertinent information, I’m starting a mobile aromatherapy treatment for people who need some uplifting
We are start up company looking to provide Palliative are and patient care services in Uganda, am recommending this video for our care aides and Doctor.
I have End Stage Dilated Cardiomyopathy. I was just put on Hospice 2 weeks ago . This way may sound good to Health Care Professionals but to someone just put on hospice this is not the way i would want this to go down. The only thing I agree with this video about is when she said yes barring some accident you are going to die from this, From my point of view this is good advice. If they are going to die from that tell them the truth, Of course you may not know when but tell them. The part i didn't agree with was the whole Clinical setting with a bunch of white coats and an Audience. Way too formal. when i met with hospice there was a RN and The Lady that did the Paperwork, A Social Worker , and a Chaplain. they called me and said they were on there way over, they said a chaplain was coming also, I said at that time I didn't want a chaplain there, they said he had to come. so they all 3 showed up and the first thing that happened was the Chaplain wouldn't stop talking even though i asked him to leave(not because im not a christian but because at that moment i wanted to be more focused on everything else. i guess) it took forever for him to leave. then it got even more confusing from there. I thought and still think on medicare for hospice a doctor has to sign forms saying with the normal course of you're disease you will die in 6 months.they are basing mine on End Stage Dilated Cardiomyopathy with 12% ejection fraction.The social worker told me medicare will pay for and you qualify for hospice if you're Ejection Fraction is 20% or less.Mine has been 12% for 5 years now, so, i guess i dont understand how a Doctor can sign papers to admit me to Hospice. I also know i can pull myself off hospice or change hospice providers whenever I want, This is actually what i am considering doing. Have You People ever thought about asking people currently on hospice what there Opinion is ? I hope you read this. I hope you ask me questions here now?
My spouse has end stage dilated cardiomyopathy (EF
I'm in love with this video.
Very educative video, thanks.
Been there recently with my mom, now my dad. Ask, Tell, Ask, works. Keep asking as well. They will have more questions...
very professionally said and demonstrated.
You dr actually understand from patient perspective
Excellent education!.....touch my heart. Thank you so much! :-)
Nice video. As the patient in Palliative care, I experienced absolutely none of this. I grapple every day about the value of palliative care except for my access to morphine. I feel like I have to play along at every visit to get my pain meds and not be seen as a difficult patient. I know palliative care and hospice care can be a lot better than what I am getting but it just doesn't seem to be available in my area. I hate every single visit to my care provider. 😢
Not all palliative care patients have cancer! When will this issue be addressed? Many of us have serious, degenerative, chronic conditions that can no longer be handled by pain management. We were born with these conditions: Ehlers-danlos Syndrome, Chiari Malformation, and many other illnesses. Our pain is just as great as a cancer patients, but we're denied care! Why???
Very interesting
Superb
Purely Beautiful
Excellent video.
Do you have any training programs to teach this to a wider audience?
Rajani Sasikumar check the CAPC website, is my suggestion
nice vid
This lay end-of-life author would respectfully suggest that clinicians consider conducting the meeting with stethoscopes draped but without white coats. The picture I see is segmented and regimented despite the excellent framework for conducting the conversation.
What an enlightening read! A book with comparable ideas altered my life. "A Life Unplugged: Reclaiming Reality in a Digital Age" by Theodore Blaze
I've been in this type of meeting twice but never like this . My moms still getting scans when she's been told twice .
❤️
Send to Dr. P
I personally think tea/coffee would be better than ice water, but otherwise great video.
THIS IS THE HARDEST JOB IN THIS WORLD