Background: Most health care systems are facing the challenge of providing health services to support the increasing numbers of older people with chronic life-limiting conditions at the end of life. Many policies focus primarily on increasing the proportion of deaths at home. Objectives: This study aims to investigate preferences for care throughout the latter stages of a life-limiting illness, particularly the importance of location of care, location of death, and the use of life-sustaining measures. It focuses on preferences for the care of an older person with advanced cancer in the last 3 weeks of life. Methods: A survey using discrete choice experiment (DCE) methods was completed online by a general population sample of 1548 Australian...
The number of Australians dying each year is predicted to double in the next 25 years and there is a...
Background: There is limited population-level research on end-of-life care in Austr...
Understanding the preferred place of death may assist to organize and deliver palliative health care...
BackgroundMost health care systems are facing the challenge of providing health services to support ...
Background: It is often suggested that terminally ill patients favour end-of-life care at home. Yet,...
Background: The wish to be cared for and to die at home is common among people with end-stage cancer...
“Home” is not just a physical compound. It is our natural habitat where meaningful and intimate time...
Aim: To explore what factors influence decisions around the place of care for terminally ill cancer ...
© 2018 Dr. Katrin GerberAdvances in healthcare, treatment and technology have profoundly altered the...
Background: Achieving choice is proposed as a quality marker. But little is known about what influen...
Objectives: Supporting patients to die in the place of their choosing is an important aspect of end ...
Choice and preference are fundamental to person-centered care and supporting personal choice at the ...
Introduction: Studies on the end of life have shown that patients with advanced cancer prefer to die...
BACKGROUND: The policy in a number of countries is to provide people with a terminal illness the cho...
Advanced cancer patients' end-of-life care preferences in oncology units, medical-surgical units, nu...
The number of Australians dying each year is predicted to double in the next 25 years and there is a...
Background: There is limited population-level research on end-of-life care in Austr...
Understanding the preferred place of death may assist to organize and deliver palliative health care...
BackgroundMost health care systems are facing the challenge of providing health services to support ...
Background: It is often suggested that terminally ill patients favour end-of-life care at home. Yet,...
Background: The wish to be cared for and to die at home is common among people with end-stage cancer...
“Home” is not just a physical compound. It is our natural habitat where meaningful and intimate time...
Aim: To explore what factors influence decisions around the place of care for terminally ill cancer ...
© 2018 Dr. Katrin GerberAdvances in healthcare, treatment and technology have profoundly altered the...
Background: Achieving choice is proposed as a quality marker. But little is known about what influen...
Objectives: Supporting patients to die in the place of their choosing is an important aspect of end ...
Choice and preference are fundamental to person-centered care and supporting personal choice at the ...
Introduction: Studies on the end of life have shown that patients with advanced cancer prefer to die...
BACKGROUND: The policy in a number of countries is to provide people with a terminal illness the cho...
Advanced cancer patients' end-of-life care preferences in oncology units, medical-surgical units, nu...
The number of Australians dying each year is predicted to double in the next 25 years and there is a...
Background: There is limited population-level research on end-of-life care in Austr...
Understanding the preferred place of death may assist to organize and deliver palliative health care...