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AcetteftAlbub
Joined: 25 Apr 2012 Posts: 22 Location: Trinidad and Tobago |
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Everyone suffers świadectwa energetyczne kraków when communication fails at the end of life. Though we may "know in our hearts" what to do in difficult situations; anxiety and bias close us down. We lose our ability to say and act on what we know is best.
Physicians and nurses suffer when they "know in their hearts" that they are doing harm performing CPR on people at a natural end of their lives on people whose bodies can do nothing more than suffer and wherein all medical moves lead to more suffering and the patient dies anyway.
Families kraków noclegi hurt when asked to make decisions in an unfamiliar setting, when they are paralyzed with anticipatory grief, and left without a roadmap and information that could help them understand their range of choices.
Patients suffer immeasurably when their last days are filled with probes and prods, jabs and shatters beyond anything they ever would have wanted to survive.
Who would choose that? apartamenty wrocław
Nurses and doctors want to help, care and comfort. Families want health professionals to help them verbalize what they "know in their hearts" and help them make choices that they can be at peace with. Patients certainly want dignity, care and comfort for the end of their lives; even if they can't say so or didn't document it in an advance directive...they want dignity, care and comfort.
At the end of life, most of us want to spend time together with loved ones in our last days and weeks; not in a hospital room, filled with 8 other people hanging bags of blood and monitoring machines. We simply want to say what needs saying and do what needs doing before we breathe our last.
But drzwi nowy sącz people don't get what they want. Palliative care conferences and hospice referrals are made way late to provide the benefits that are possible and way fewer people than are eligible and who would benefit by those services get them.
What would it be like if doctors and nurses knew how to guide effective end-of-life conversations that help people to get what they want and be at peace? What if these conversations didn't have to be emotionally draining, interpersonally complex or time consuming? And what if this were possible by going with the awareness of what we "know in our hearts" to guide these conversations? Here's a true story of a conversation like that: _________________ usługi dekarskie
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