Background: Providing person-centred, dignity-conserving care for hospitalised patients is central to many healthcare policies and essential to the provision of effective palliative care. The Patient Dignity Question (PDQ) "What do I need to know about you as a person to take the best care of you that I can?" was designed from empirical research on patients' perceptions of their dignity at end of life to help healthcare professionals (HCPs) understand the patient as a person. Methods: This mixed method pilot study was designed to inform a larger multisite study in the future. It tests the hypothesis that the PDQ intervention could be used to enhance a more person-centred climate for people with palliative care needs in the acute hospital se...
Reflective practice involves deliberate consideration of actions, attitudes and behaviors. Reflexivi...
Aims and objectives: To report an integrative review of evidence relating to dignity-conserving ...
Despite use of the term dignity in arguments for and against a patient's self-governance in matters ...
Background: Providing person-centred, dignity-conserving care for hospitalised patients is central t...
Background The aim of palliative care is to improve the quality of life of patients who are living w...
Objective: The purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the Patient ...
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the Pati...
Introduction: The Patient Dignity Question (PDQ) is a clinical tool developed with the aim of reinfo...
BACKGROUND: A core concept behind patient-centred approaches is the need to treat people with, a...
Background: A core concept behind patient-centred approaches is the need to treat people with, and p...
Context Failure to acknowledge personhood is often the cause of patient and family dissatisfaction. ...
Background: Dignity is a concept that applies to all patients. Older patients can be particularly vu...
Abstract Background Dignity is a basic principle of palliative care and is intrinsic in the daily pr...
BACKGROUND: Research has shown that dying with dignity is often used as an equivalent of ‘good death...
Reflective practice involves deliberate consideration of actions, attitudes and behaviors. Reflexivi...
Aims and objectives: To report an integrative review of evidence relating to dignity-conserving ...
Despite use of the term dignity in arguments for and against a patient's self-governance in matters ...
Background: Providing person-centred, dignity-conserving care for hospitalised patients is central t...
Background The aim of palliative care is to improve the quality of life of patients who are living w...
Objective: The purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the Patient ...
OBJECTIVE: The purpose of this study was to assess the feasibility and acceptability of the Pati...
Introduction: The Patient Dignity Question (PDQ) is a clinical tool developed with the aim of reinfo...
BACKGROUND: A core concept behind patient-centred approaches is the need to treat people with, a...
Background: A core concept behind patient-centred approaches is the need to treat people with, and p...
Context Failure to acknowledge personhood is often the cause of patient and family dissatisfaction. ...
Background: Dignity is a concept that applies to all patients. Older patients can be particularly vu...
Abstract Background Dignity is a basic principle of palliative care and is intrinsic in the daily pr...
BACKGROUND: Research has shown that dying with dignity is often used as an equivalent of ‘good death...
Reflective practice involves deliberate consideration of actions, attitudes and behaviors. Reflexivi...
Aims and objectives: To report an integrative review of evidence relating to dignity-conserving ...
Despite use of the term dignity in arguments for and against a patient's self-governance in matters ...