Handbook of Supportive Oncology and Palliative Care is a practical guide to providing evidence-based and value-based care to adult and pediatric cancer patients experiencing severe symptoms and stressors due to cancer diagnosis, cancer treatment, and comorbid conditions. This accessible reference provides the art and science behind the whole-person and family approach to care by delivering the best practices to relieving a cancer patient’s symptoms across physical, psychosocial, and spiritual dimensions. Unlike other resources, this book covers all dimensions of palliative care but with a special emphasis on primary palliative care. Part One of the handbook provides the essential background and principles of supportive oncology and palliative care, including chapters on understanding the adult and pediatric patient and family illness experience, the roles and responsibilities of the palliative care team, and the art of the palliative care assessment interview. Part Two covers symptom management and includes ten chapters considering the major physical and psychosocial symptoms a cancer patient may face—neurologic, cardiac, respiratory, gastrointestinal, genitourinary, psychiatric, sleep and fatigue, pain, and psychosocial and spiritual distress. Part Three addresses special considerations and issues that an oncologist, physician, nurse or other healthcare provider often face in these settings, including chapters on intimacy, sexuality, and fertility issues, grief and bereavement, running a family meeting, care for the caregiver, and survivorship.
Written by expert clinicians, this state-of-the-art handbook is a necessary resource for any oncologist, nurse, primary care physician, psychosocial expert, or related practitioner who endeavors to improve quality of life and provide healing to those suffering from cancer and its treatment.
Key Features:
- Provides the binding principles of palliative care for pediatrics, adults and families from diverse cultures and spiritual beliefs
- Easy-to-read format makes extracting content fast and convenient for both the clinical and educational setting
- Guides the clinician and practitioner through the palliative care assessment process, including the appropriate questions for the palliative care interview
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Contents
Contributors
Preface
I. The Whole-Person Approach to Supportive Oncology and Palliative Care
1. Understanding the Adult Cancer Patient and Caregiver Perspective—The Illness Experience
Kim Mooney-Doyle
2. Understanding the Pediatric Cancer Patient and Caregiver Perspective—The Illness Experience
Kathryn Detwiler, Brian Detwiler, Deborah Fisher, and Katherine Patterson Kelly
3. Principles of Palliative Care: Across Age Groups, Settings, and Cultures
Meaghann Weaver
4. The Palliative Care Team and Care Coordination—Healing Versus Curing
Lisa C. Lindley and Jessica Keim-Malpass
5. The Palliative Care Assessment—Clinical Interview Questions for Adults and Children
Ann M. Berger, Lori Wiener, Najmeh Jafari, and Christina M. Puchalski
II. Symptom Management of Advanced Cancer and Cancer Treatment
6. Neurologic Symptom Management in the Advanced Brain and Central Nervous System Cancer Patient
Ann H. Lichtenstein
7. Heart Failure in Adults and Children With Oncologic Disease
Julia Cheringal and David M. Steinhorn
8. Pulmonary Symptom Management in Adults and Children With Oncologic Disease
David M. Steinhorn
9. Gastrointestinal Symptom Management in Adults and Children With Oncologic Disease
Shana S. Jacobs, Gleynora J. Gil Bhrighde, Margaret M. Mahon, and Catriona Mowbray
10. Genitourinary Symptom Management in Adults and Children With Oncologic Disease
Michael H. Hsieh, Jeffrey Villanueva, and Monika Gasiorek
11. Psychiatric Symptom Management in Adult and Pediatric Cancer Patients: Anxiety, Delirium, and Depression
Ann H. Lichtenstein, Anna B. Jolliffe, and Rezvan Ameli
12. Sleep Disorders, Fatigue, and Sleep Deprivation Management in Adult and Pediatric Cancer Patients
Meaghann Weaver and Jill Bechaz
13. Cancer Pain and Its Treatment
Sarah M. Verga, Andrew Whitman, Kevin Adams, and Ambereen K. Mehta
14. Drug-Related Endocrine System Disruption and Management in Palliative Cancer Care
Ashley Anderson and Jaydira Del Rivero
15. Psychosocial and Spiritual Distress in the Advanced Adult and Pediatric Cancer Patient
Laura Hofmann, Rita A. Manfredi, Robert M. Kaiser, Najmeh Jafari, and Christina M. Puchalski
III. Supportive Oncology and Quality of Life Considerations for Patients, Families, and Caregivers
16. Intimacy, Sexuality, and Fertility Issues Associated With Cancer Treatment
Tara Berman
17. Caregiver and Family Grief and Bereavement (Including Anticipatory and Complicated)
Rachel Ombres, Karen Baker, and Lori Wiener
18. Running a Family Meeting With the Palliative Care Team
Juanita L. Smith, Margaret M. Mahon, and Shana S. Jacobs
19. Caring for the Family Caregiver of Cancer Patients
Lori Wiener, Margaret Bevans, Amy M. Garee, and Allison J. Applebaum
20. Palliative Care and Cancer Survivorship
Rebecca Berger and M. Jennifer Cheng
21. Palliative and End-of-Life Care for Adult and Pediatric Cancer Patients
Victoria D. Powell and Anne Watson
22. Advance Care Planning for Adult and Pediatric Cancer Patients
Katalin Eve Roth and Maureen E. Lyon
Index