Background and aims: Patients with advanced gastrointestinal cancer may present late to hospital services and die under surgical care. The aim of this study was to examine end of life care in patients dying of gastrointestinal cancer in Scottish hospital surgical wards. Methods: The Scottish Audit of Surgical Mortality prospectively peer reviews all inpatient deaths under the care of a consultant surgeon. Patients who died with gastrointestinal cancer under surgical care from 1994 to 2006 were evaluated for operative interventions, adverse events, and palliative care provision. Data was compared with inpatient data from the Information Statistics Division of NHS Scotland. Results: A total of 8019 patients died with gastrointestinal cancer o...
Background: Provision of palliative care for people dying with malignant disease is a well-characte...
Background:When dealing with patients who have been diagnosed with Stage IV (incurable) GI cancers, ...
Purpose: To examine and compare end-of-life care in patients with cancer dying in Belgium and the Ne...
Background and aims: Patients with advanced gastrointestinal cancer may present late to hospital ser...
Objectives Palliative surgery aims to relieve patients’ symptoms and improve quality of life with su...
Background: Patients with advanced illnesses are often admitted with acute surgical emergencies. The...
Aim: This study examined the trends in mortality and contributing adverse events associated with dea...
Objective: To compare survival, readmissions, and end-of-life care after palliative procedures compa...
Objective The aim of this study is to examine why patients are hospitalised in the last stage of lif...
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to describe and compare the relation between treatment aims, h...
Since intensive care unit (ICU) admission and chemotherapy use near death impair the quality of life...
Introduction Many cancer patients die in the hospital, in spite of their preference to end their liv...
Background: Palliative emergency gastrointestinal surgery is associated with significant morbidity a...
Introduction: The alleviation of suffering is a primary goal of palliative care team for patients wi...
Traditionally, palliative care (PC) systems focused on the needs of advanced cancer patients, but mo...
Background: Provision of palliative care for people dying with malignant disease is a well-characte...
Background:When dealing with patients who have been diagnosed with Stage IV (incurable) GI cancers, ...
Purpose: To examine and compare end-of-life care in patients with cancer dying in Belgium and the Ne...
Background and aims: Patients with advanced gastrointestinal cancer may present late to hospital ser...
Objectives Palliative surgery aims to relieve patients’ symptoms and improve quality of life with su...
Background: Patients with advanced illnesses are often admitted with acute surgical emergencies. The...
Aim: This study examined the trends in mortality and contributing adverse events associated with dea...
Objective: To compare survival, readmissions, and end-of-life care after palliative procedures compa...
Objective The aim of this study is to examine why patients are hospitalised in the last stage of lif...
Purpose: The purpose of this study is to describe and compare the relation between treatment aims, h...
Since intensive care unit (ICU) admission and chemotherapy use near death impair the quality of life...
Introduction Many cancer patients die in the hospital, in spite of their preference to end their liv...
Background: Palliative emergency gastrointestinal surgery is associated with significant morbidity a...
Introduction: The alleviation of suffering is a primary goal of palliative care team for patients wi...
Traditionally, palliative care (PC) systems focused on the needs of advanced cancer patients, but mo...
Background: Provision of palliative care for people dying with malignant disease is a well-characte...
Background:When dealing with patients who have been diagnosed with Stage IV (incurable) GI cancers, ...
Purpose: To examine and compare end-of-life care in patients with cancer dying in Belgium and the Ne...