Herbst-Damm, K. L., & Kulik, J. A. (2005). Volunteer support, marital status, and the survival times of terminally ill patients. Health Psychology, 24, 225-229. doi:10.1037/0278-6133.24.2.225…
The purpose of this quasi-experimental study was to determine whether women who receive telephone calls and written instructions for self-care after chemotherapy will use more self-care than those women who receive standard care. The article also seeks to understand if women receiving chemotherapy for breast cancer who score higher on the Exercise of Self-Care Agency Scale, before chemotherapy used more and effective self-care measures during chemotherapy than women scoring lower on the scale.…
The purpose of the group is to provide support to cancer survivors, and help them maintain their quality of life during treatment and when treatment is complete. This support groups can help cancer survivors cope with the emotional aspects of cancer. Being a group member, survivors will learn…
Forrest, L., RMT. (2011). Supportive Cancer Care at the End of Life: Mapping the Cultural…
|CancerUnrelieved painPatients lay in bed crying.Increased signs of depression by her husband.Mrs. Thomas does not want to burden family and friends. Mrs. Thomas’s children find it too painful to visit her.No long-term health insurance. Difficulty making ends meet. |Patient will be able to express her grief and understand the stages of grief.Patient will identify and engage support systems as needed.Patient will be able to participate in care as tolerated by alleviating pain and increasing tolerance to activities of daily living. Patient will adopt “one day at a time” living. Patient will be able to set realistic personal goals. |Pastoral care to address patient’s spiritual needs and provide grief counseling due to terminal illness. Encourage patient to verbalize feelings, fears and worries. Assist patient to set realistic goals. Assist with identification of solutions to current problems. Social Worker to assess family dynamics, barriers to care and community resources to assist patient and family financially and socially. Family teaching and counseling to patient’s sons regarding the importance of visiting their mother. Social Worker to arrange family meeting to identify family goals and responsibilities. Psychiatry referral for counseling, assessing barriers to taking…
A terminal illness can have a devastating effect, not only on the patient, but the family as well. Caring for the patient does not just involve physically caring for the patient, but rather involves the holistic care, which is “all nursing practice that has healing the whole person as its goal” (American Holistic Nurses’ Association, 1998). The nurse becomes the therapeutic partner, which involves the care of the mind, body, and spirit, and is at the forefront of this care. It involves the patient and the care of the family during this difficult time.…
Herbst-Damm, K. L., & Kulik, J. A. (2005). Volunteer support, marital status, and the survival times of terminally ill patients. Health Psychology, 24, 225-229. doi:10.1037/0278-6133.24.2.225…
My wife passed away six months ago, on June 28, 2011, after she had struggled with cancer for 17 months. For 17 months, we went through cycles of promises of hope for her recovery, followed by announcements that another tumor had been found and they would try a different chemotherapy. Then hope! Then another tumor, a different type of treatment, more surgery, a different hospital, and different promises. Over and over. Yet none of those promises came true.…
This paper talks about the feelings that parent experiment after their child is diagnosed with cancer. This paper also gives a guide to the reader on how to overcome those feeling of anger, guilty, and any other feeling. The key part in this article is how it describe each feeling that the parents pass trough after hearing their child have cancer. This paper will take the readers attention by showing them how the parents deal with their emotions and how they can get over it.…
The patient chosen for this essay is a sixty year old man. This patient was one of the palliative care patients that the team of district nurses I was allocated to work with in my community placement care for. The patient has terminal liver cancer. The patient lives with his wife whom is his main carer. The district nurses had to visit him every day of the week. The patient had a syringe driver on situ which needed to be filled with a new dose of medication every 24 hours. Also the extension set needed to be changed to the other side of the patient’s body when the side it was on became sore. The main care needs for the patient were to palliate physical symptoms and maintain independence for as long and as comfortably as possible.…
Every woman is at risk of developing reproductive cancer, which is any cancer that starts in a woman’s reproductive organs, and the risk of onset increases with age. This includes cervical, ovarian, vaginal and vulvar cancers (CDC). There are 100,000 new cases diagnosed each year, with ovarian cancer being the fifth leading cause of death in women in the United States (Journal of Women’s Health). Stages I-III of reproductive cancer treatment are associated with extreme fatigue. This side effect makes cooking, cleaning, and other tasks energy depleting and stressful. Cancer-related fatigue also causes pain, nausea, vomiting, and/or depression, and even small activities can be exhausting. In addition, the cost of cancer treatment is so high that it may become difficult for these women to afford basic living expenses, such as food. According to ASCO, the cost of cancer treatment ranges from $10,000-$30,000 per month, and Current Women’s Health Reviews reports that the average total cost of ovarian cancer treatment is greater than $210,000. Because of the sacrifices women must make to continue cancer treatment, Pink Ribbon Girls strives to serve as active emotional, physical support system for women in the Miami Valley with services such as free weekly, healthy meals for a family of four, house cleaning, transportation to and from…
(AHIMA 2010) Some cancer survivors have been trained and equipped to help other patients go through the cancer process and decisions that will have to be made. Many of these patient navigators bring more than just a wealth of experience of the diagnosis and treatments, but also an understanding of what the diagnosis feels like on a deeply personal level. They bring an additional dimension in helping other cancer victims manage their circumstances with empathy and…
American Cancer Society, established in 1913, is a national community-based organization that is dedicated to fighting and eliminating cancer through prevention, research, education, advocacy, and service. The organization was established by 15 physicians and businessmen, in New York City, under the name American Society for the Control of Cancer. The name was changed to American Cancer Society in 1945, when the society was reorganized to recognize the new era. The symbol is composed of two serpents and a sword of hope which represent the scientific medical focus and the crusading spirit of the movement against cancer. The society is currently run by volunteers. The number one goal of the organization is to “save lives and create a world with less cancer and more birthdays by helping people stay well, helping people get well, by finding cures, and by fighting back,” (American Cancer Society [ACS], 2013). Over the years, the society has become the “global leader in the fight against cancer,” (ACS, 2013), with close to 12 million survivors in the United States alone. The purpose of this paper is to examine the services as well as health, psychosocial, and educational benefits that the organization provides to their clients and the community. The paper will also discuss the application of the available services in a healthcare setting during the patient discharge planning process.…
Weitzner, M., Haley, W.E., & Chen, H. (2000). The family caregiver of the oldercancer patient. Hematology/Oncology Clinics of North America, 14, 269 – 281.…
Kinney, C., Rodgers, D., Nash, K., Bray, C. (2003). Holistic Healing for Women With Breast Cancer Through a Mind, Body, and Spirit Self-Empowerment Program. Journal of Holistic Nursing, 3 (21), 260-279. Retrieved on November 2, 2012 from http://perceivedwellness.com/kinney.pdf.…