Better palliative care for older people / WHO - World Health Organization ; edited by Elizabeth Davies and Irene J Higginson
By: WHO - World Health Organization.
Contributor(s): Davies, Elizabeth [ed.] | Higginson, Irene J [ed.] | OMS - Organización Mundial de la Salud (Ginebra).
Ginebra : WHO - World Health Organization, 2004 Description: 40 p. : il. a color ; 24 x 21 cm.ISBN: 92 890 10924.Subject(s): Adultos mayores -- salud | Cuidados hospitalarios | Cuidados medicos | Cuidados Paliativos | Medicina basada en la evidencia | Personas mayores -- salud | Promocion de la salud | Salud de la comunidad | Servicios médicos para envejecidosDDC classification: 613.0438 / W628b http://www.euro.who.int/document/e82933.pdfhttp://www.euro.who.int/document/e82933R.pdf (File size: 1MB)Item type | Current location | Collection | Call number | Vol info | Copy number | Status | Notes | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Libros | Biblioteca Ciencias de la Salud | FONDO BIBL | 613.0438 / W628b (Browse shelf) | 8001 | 1 | Available | DO | 8300006139 | ||
Libros | Biblioteca Ciencias de la Salud | FONDO BIBL | 613.0438 / W628b (Browse shelf) | 8001 | 2 | Available | DO | 8300006140 |
Why palliative care for older people is a public health priority -- Palliative carte: the needs and rights
of older people and their families -- Evidence of underassessment and undertreatment -- Evidence of effective
care solutions -- The challenge for health policy- and decisión-makers -- Recommendations --
Most deaths in European and other developed countries occur in people aged over 65, but relatively little
health policy concerns their needs in the last years of life. As life expectancy increases, the number of
people living to older ages is also increasing in many countries. At the same time, the relative number of
people of working age is declining and the age of potential caregivers is increasing. Palliative care is
therefore of growing public health importance. Older people have traditionally received less palliative care
than younger people and services have focused on cancer. This booklet is part of the WHO Regional Office for
Europe's work to present evidence for health policy- and decision-makers in a clear and understandable form.
It presents the needs of older people, the different trajectories of illnesses they suffer, evidence of
underassessment of pain and other symptoms, their need to be involved in decision-making, evidence for
effective palliative care solutions, and issues for the future. A companion booklet entitled Palliative care
- the solid facts considers how to improve services and educate professionals and the public.
http://www.euro.who.int/document/e82933.pdf
http://www.euro.who.int/document/e82933R.pdf (File size: 1MB)
There are no comments for this item.