1st Edition

Palliative Care for Care Homes A Practical Handbook

By Christine Reddall Copyright 2009

    Care home workers increasingly work with people nearing the end of their lives, including people with medically complex conditions. However, many do not have a medical background and find that practical advice on how to address these people's very specific needs is scarce. In this book, Christine Reddall draws on almost four decades of nursing experience to create a clear and easy-to-read handbook primarily for workers caring for the dying in care homes, but which will also be of interest to family members caring for relatives with life-threatening conditions.'This is a resource book to provide information on palliative care. It is designed primarily to help carers who work in care homes of all categories. To my knowledge, this is the first book written solely for carers working in care homes that addresses the issues of caring for someone with palliative care needs. However, people with whom I have spoken to about this book, or who have read parts of it, have all said that it would also be a helpful resource to non-professional family carers who care for a family member in their own home. The style of this book is designed to be readable by all levels of carers, and I have endeavoured to keep the language and text as 'non-medical' as possible. I have tried to put myself in the shoes of carers, especially those without medical training, and think of what they want to know when caring for someone with a life threatening illness' - Christine Reddall in her Preface.

    What is Palliative care? What is a Macmillan Nurse? What is a Hospice? What is cancer? What is a syringe driver? Symptom control. Breathlessness (Dyspnoea). Constipation. Fatigue. Mouth problems. Nausea and vomiting. Pain. Difficulty eating and drinking. Other symptoms. Difficult Questions. Spiritual distress in Palliative Care. The dying process. A good death. After death. Acute medical events in Palliative care. Acute terminal events in Palliative care. Morphine and pain patches. Dementia. Palliative care for people with learning disabilities. The unexpected. Older people in care homes. Benefits and grants in Palliative care. Care pathways in Palliative care. Advanced care planning. Palliative care Education. Looking after yourself.

    Biography

    Christine Reddall