Top Ten Tips Palliative Care Clinicians Should Know About Attending to the Existential Experience
Tarbi E, Moore C, Wallace C, Beaussant Y, Broden E, Chammas D, Galchutt P, Gilchrist D, Hayden A, Morgan B, Rosenberg L, Sager Z, Solomon S, Rosa W, Chochinov H. Top Ten Tips Palliative Care Clinicians Should Know About Attending to the Existential Experience. Journal Of Palliative Medicine 2024, 27: 1379-1389. PMID: 38546453, DOI: 10.1089/jpm.2024.0070.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPalliative careImplement evidence-based interventionsCulture of health carePalliative care cliniciansEvidence-based interventionsCare partnersExistential careCare cliniciansHealth careSystemic barriersExistential needsCareExistential experienceIll-preparedExistential dimensionLived experienceIndividual factorsCliniciansInterventionIllnessPatientsNeedsPersonsSkillsBarriersSupported Privacy: An Essential Principle for End-of-Life Care for Children and Families in the PICU
Butler A, Pasek T, Clark T, Broden E. Supported Privacy: An Essential Principle for End-of-Life Care for Children and Families in the PICU. Pediatric Critical Care Medicine 2024, 25: e258-e262. PMID: 38695704, DOI: 10.1097/pcc.0000000000003440.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsEnd-of-lifeEnd-of-life care practicesDelivery of high-quality careEnd-of-life experiencesHigh-quality careProvision of privacyPICU staffCare practicesPICU teamChild deathsFamily feelingsMedicine perspectivePractical needsPICUCareStaffNeedsChildrenFamilyEmotional responsesParadoxical needPediatricCliniciansTeamDelivery