Palliative care
It is hoped that the reader has an appreciation for what care near the end of life could be, and that it should be viewed as a shift in focus to optimize quality of life and minimize symptoms rather than attempting to cure a disease. Symptom management and maximizing function require excellent technical and interpersonal skills and is required by all physicians in all specialties to provide "comfort always." A letter from a medical intensive care specialist illustrates this and other points20: When it is not possible to save a life, I have learned and have begun to teach how to 'save a death,' as I have come to call it- to help a patient preserve comfort and dignity despite overwhelming illness and to help a family understand the inevitability of the death, how the death might at this time be appropriate, and how to move forward in the process of bereavement. Saving deaths, I have to realize, is as important and rewarding as saving lives. This is the central and enduring message in the letters in my file.
Duke Scholars
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- General & Internal Medicine
Citation
Published In
DOI
ISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Issue
Start / End Page
Related Subject Headings
- General & Internal Medicine