The philosophy of palliative care : critique and reconstruction
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
The philosophy of palliative care : critique and reconstruction
Oxford University Press, 2006
- pbk
Available at 24 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
The idea of a philosophy of palliative care emerged with Cicely Saunders' vision for 'a good death', and was developed further with the WHO definition of palliative care. It is now being applied not only to cancer patients, but to all patients in end of life situations. As this 'palliative care approach' advances, it is important to pause and comment on its effectiveness. It is a philosophy of patient care, and is therefore open to critique and evaluation.
Using the Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine, 3rd edition as their basic reference, Randall and Downie present their argument that the palliative care approach has become too busy and over-professionalised, and that it therefore has significant weaknesses. They examine the framework of the specialty - quality of life, autonomy, dignity, patient-centredness, and the priority assigned to relatives in the remit of care - and the moral problems associated with implementing such a
philosophy. The resource implications of various health care policies are also discussed in relation to the WHO definition.
Whilst the authors defend the achievements of palliative care and those who work in the profession, they present suggestions for an alternative philosophy. Their philosophy prompts many ethical and philosophical questions about the future of palliative care.
Table of Contents
- 1. Roots, traditions and philosophy
- 2. Quality of life
- 3. Autonomy, dignity, respect and the patient centred approach
- 4. Relatives
- 5. Control of symptoms and prolongation of life
- 6. Resuscitation and advance statements
- 7. Assessment and treatment of psychosocial and spiritual problems
- 8. Resource allocation
- 9. Critique and reconstruction: some suggestions for a better way
by "Nielsen BookData"