1st Edition

Innovations in Cancer and Palliative Care Education v. 4, Prognosis

By Lorna Foyle, Janis Hostad Copyright 2007

    This work includes Foreword by Nigel Sykes, Medical Director, St Christopher's Hospice, London. This practical, evidence-based guide has been specifically designed for teachers in cancer and palliative care. It is completely up-to-date and covers the recent complex changes in cancer and palliative care delivery, offering a range of different, creative approaches. Ideal for training, the text includes highlighted key points, self help questions for reflection, and references where applicable. It provides invaluable guidance for all healthcare professionals with palliative care teaching responsibilities, including undergraduate and postgraduate healthcare educators and Macmillan lecturers. '[This] book gives us a three-dimensional view of how to respond to the demands on cancer and palliative care education today, set particularly in a British context but, of course, capable of extrapolation to other settings. These three dimensions of innovation can be summarised as: What do you teach? How do you teach it? To whom do you teach it? Innovation in all three aspects simultaneously may be difficult to achieve, but all who have a responsibility for education are faced with the challenges of making their teaching more effective (and demonstrating that they have done so), keeping abreast of advancing knowledge and clinical practice, and of reaching out to groups of learners who hitherto have been neglected. Of significant help to anyone in this field whose concern is the delivery of effective and appropriate education.' - Nigel Sykes, in the Foreword.

    High fidelity simulation in cancer and palliative care education. The use of competencies in palliative care education. Problem based learning: not such a problem. The conundrums of delivering chemotherapy care: tackling the educational challenges. Leading the way: the role of education in achieving clinical standards in the haematological setting. Approaches to multiprofessional radiotherapy education. Taking the pain out of pain management teaching. Solutions for symptom management teaching. Teaching ethics in cancer and palliative care. Information for service users: educational implications. Pre-registration nursing: cancer and palliative care education. Is paediatric oncology nurse education fit for purpose? Teaching professionals to work with learning disability patients. Palliative care in nursing homes: an educational challenge. Family care sensitive and dynamic approaches to teaching. Mapping the landscape: spirituality in cancer and palliative care education. 'Let's talk about it. We never do.' Sexual heath in cancer and palliative care: an educational dilemma? Complementary therapies: progressing from knowledge to wisdom. Rehabilitation: imperatives in cancer and palliative care education. Teaching approaches to survivorship issues in cancer care. Health and social policy: universally relevant, studiously avoided.

    Biography

    Lorna Foyle, Janis Hostad