牛津缓和医学教科书,第二版。

S. Craig
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引用次数: 194

摘要

缓和医学的牛津教科书的第二版是一个彻底的和令人信服的论文关于临终关怀的主题。它为照顾临终者的医生和其他卫生保健提供者提供了急需的资源。书中将近一半的内容都是关于如何控制濒死病人的各种症状。正如人们所期望的那样,关于死亡的文本,关于疼痛控制和管理的章节非常彻底和翔实。书中提供了几种缓解疼痛的方法,这些方法在传统的医学教科书中可能不会被考虑到。文本还包括优秀的章节姑息治疗的症状,而不是疼痛,包括胃肠道,呼吸系统,神经系统和皮肤病的问题。关于介入放射学和姑息手术的章节让那些认为姑息治疗只是在家里给病人注射吗啡的人大开眼界。我发现关于如何将坏消息告诉病人及其家属的深思熟虑的讨论特别有帮助。来自全球各地的卫生保健提供者的作者投入确保了一个真正普遍的观点。来自非医师的卫生保健人员的输入使得这本书对护士、社会工作者和其他为临终病人提供服务的人很有用。这些部分使文本必须为任何临终关怀团队。这本书的主要缺点是篇幅太大。任何想要简明、快速阅读缓和医学的人都不会在这里找到它。本书的前200页讨论了现代临终关怀运动的历史和发展。虽然这篇文章读起来很有趣,但把它放在社会学或医学史的单独文章中似乎更合适。尽管大多数讨论都是完整的,但只有很少的段落致力于帮助医生向病人和家属传达可能是进入临终关怀项目的时候了。在这个医学奇迹、磁共振成像和“神奇子弹”化疗药物层出不穷的时代,病人和他们的家人经常继续推动“不惜一切代价”,即使关心病人的医生知道姑息治疗是最好的选择。执业医师面临的最大挑战之一是让患者相信“舒适护理”比继续进行必要的戳、刺、针和疼痛的研究过程更能提高他们的生活质量。更多关于如何帮助病人及其家属了解死亡过程的讨论是值得的。撇开上述批评不谈,对于那些关心临终者的人来说,这本书是一个极好的资源,应该在任何希望实践姑息医学的人的书架上占据一个突出的位置。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine, 2nd ed.
The 2nd edition of the Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine is a thorough and compelling treatise on the subject of end-of-life care. It provides a much-needed resource for physicians and other health care providers who care for those who are dying. Nearly half of the text concerns the difficult task of controlling the myriad symptoms from which dying patients suffer. As would be expected from a text on dying, the chapters on pain control and management are exceedingly thorough and informative. Several options for alleviating pain are offered that might not have been considered in a more conventional textbook of medicine. The text also includes excellent chapters on palliative care for symptoms other than pain, including gastrointestinal, respiratory, neurologic, and dermatologic problems. Chapters on interventional radiology and palliative surgery are eye-opening for those who think of palliative care simply as giving morphine to patients at home. I found the well-thought-out discussion on how to break bad news to patients and their families particularly helpful. Authorship input from health care providers from around the globe ensure a perspective that is truly universal. Input from nonphysician health care personnel makes the book useful for nurses, social workers, and others who provide services to the dying patient. These sections make the text a must for any hospice team. The major drawback of this text is its size. Anyone looking for a concise, quick read in palliative medicine will not find it here. The first 200 pages of the book discuss the history and development of the modern hospice movement. While this makes for interesting reading, it would seem more appropriate in a separate text on the sociology or history of medicine. Although most discussions are complete, a paltry 4 paragraphs are devoted to helping the physician convey to patients and families that it may be time to enter a hospice program. In these times of medical miracles, magnetic resonance imaging, and “magic bullet” chemotherapeutic agents, patients and their families often continue to push to “do it all at all costs,” even when the physician who cares for the patient knows that palliative medicine is the best option. One of the greatest challenges practicing physicians face is convincing patients that “comfort care” will improve their quality of life more so than continuing the investigational process with its necessary poking, prodding, needles, and pain. More discussion on how to help patients and their families understand the dying process would have been time well spent. Above criticisms aside, the text is an excellent resource for those who care for the dying and should occupy a prominent place on the bookshelf of anyone who wishes to practice palliative medicine.
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