S. Morrison's scientific contributions

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Publications (1)


Geriatric palliative care - Part I: Pain and symptom management
  • Article

January 2007

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111 Reads

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8 Citations

Clinical Geriatrics

T.F. Bishop

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S. Morrison

Palliative care is the interdisciplinary specialty that focuses on improving quality of life for patients with advanced illness and their families. It is offered simultaneously with all other appropriate medical care, and relieves patient and family suffering by providing expert pain and symptom management, as well as sophisticated communication regarding advance care planning, delivery of bad news, establishing goals of care, and decisions to withhold or withdraw medical treatments. The aging population, in combination with an increasingly fragmented healthcare system, makes the need for palliative care evident now more than ever. In Part I of this two-part article, the authors address the core palliative care skills of pain and symptom management. In Part II (to be published in an upcoming issue of Clinical Geriatrics), the authors will address communication skills.

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Citations (1)


... Because many palliative care patients are over the age of 65 years, especially those with noncancer diagnoses, treatment of nausea and vomiting with antiemetic drugs can be more difficult in these geriatric patients than in younger ones. Physiologic changes such as diminished renal function, changes in body fat distribution, and alterations in hepatic metabolism, can lead to higher levels of medications and a greater susceptibility to adverse effects.6 Special reference will be made to pharmacological considerations that are necessary when prescribing antiemetics in older patients. ...

Reference:

Treating nausea and vomiting in palliative care: A review
Geriatric palliative care - Part I: Pain and symptom management
  • Citing Article
  • January 2007

Clinical Geriatrics