
Palliative care is an essential element of our health care system and is becoming increasingly significant amidst an aging society and organizations struggling to provide both compassionate and cost-effective care. Palliative care is also characterized by a string interdisciplinary approach. Nurses are at the center of the palliative care team across settings and populations. The seventh volume in the HPNA Palliative Nursing Manuals series, Care of the Imminently Dying provides an overview of symptom management when a patient is reaching the end of their life. This volume covers delirium and the advantages of early diagnosis, determining the presence of dyspnea, death rattle, or cough, urgent syndromes that may appear the end of life, palliative sedation, and the withdrawal of life-sustaining therapies. The content of the concise, clinically focused volumes in the HPNA Palliative Nursing Manuals series is one resource for nurses preparing for specialty certification exams and provides a quick-reference in daily practice.
This volume investigates the clinical protocols and symptom management strategies required for nurses providing care to patients in the final stages of life. Author Gary May, writing within the HPNA Palliative Nursing Manuals framework, synthesizes evidence-based practices to assist healthcare professionals in navigating the complex physiological and ethical challenges of end-of-life care. The text serves as both a study aid for specialty certification and a practical reference for daily clinical application.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts and practitioners recognize this manual as a standard reference for nurses seeking to standardize their approach to terminal care. Readers frequently note the clinical density and practical utility of the text for those preparing for professional certification exams.
Page Count:
104
Publication Date:
2015-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190244305
ISBN-13:
9780190244309
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