Cicely Saunders: Selected Writings 1958-2004

Capa
OUP Oxford, 5 de jan. de 2006 - 300 páginas
Cicely Saunders is universally acclaimed as a pioneer of modern hospice care. Trained initially in nursing and social work, she qualified in medicine in 1958 and subsequently dedicated the whole of her professional life to improving the care of the dying and bereaved people. Founding St Christopher's Hospice in London in 1967, she encouraged a radical new approach to end of life care combining attention to physical, social, emotional and spiritual problems, brilliantly captured in her concept of 'total pain'. Her ideas about clinical care, education and research have been hugely influential, leading to numerous prizes and awards in recognition of her humanitarian achievements. This book includes a selection of Cicely Saunders' most important writings throughout a period of over forty years. Full articles, chapters, editorials, reviews, and commentaries include important clinical themes relating to the care of dying people such as pain and symptom management, issues of communication and truth telling, and the needs of particular patient groups, such as those with cancer and other diseases. The book includes pieces that reflect on the wider development of the palliative care field and on policy and organisational issues. Some of the papers take up the theme of spiritual care at the end of life, as well as the question of euthanasia, raising in turn issues of a wider theological and philosophical nature. The articles are written for a multi-disciplinary audience and will be of enormous interest to many professionals now working in palliative care. The collection will become a key work of reference for those interested in the evolution of hospice and palliative care and will serve as an important sourcebook of many currently hard to obtain publications by the acknowledged founder of the modern hospice movement. This book will also stand as a remarkable testimony to the personal contribution of Cicely Saunders and the influence she has had upon the modern field of palliative and end of life care.
 

Conteúdo

Dying of Cancer St Thomass Hospital Gazette 1958
1
Should a Patient Know ? Nursing Times 1959
13
When a Patient is Dying Nursing Times 1959
17
The Management of Patients in the Terminal Stage Cancer 1960
21
And From Sudden Death Frontier 1961
37
A Patient Nursing Times 1961
41
The Care of the Dying Better Health 1961
49
Terminal Illness Proceedings of Health Congress of the Royal Society of Health 1961
53
The Philosophy of Terminal Care
147
Templeton Prize Speech
157
41
163
49
164
Heroin and Morphine in Advanced Cancer
183
67
187
On Dying Well
197
Evaluation of Hospice Activities
203

Working at St Josephs Hospice Hackney Annual Report of St Vincents Dublin 1962
57
The Treatment of Intractable Pain in Terminal Cancer Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine 1963
61
Distress in Dying British Medical Journal 1963
65
The Depths and the Possible Heights Medical News 1964
67
The Need for Institutional Care for the Patient with Advanced Cancer Anniversary Volume Cancer Institute Madras 1964
71
The Last Stages of Life American Journal of Nursing 1965
79
The Last Frontier Frontier 1966
87
1
91
13
93
17
115
A Place to
125
21
133
The Problem of Euthanasia Care of the dying
135
An Exploration
215
Hospice a Meeting Place for Religion and Science
223
Letter on Alfred Worcester
229
Stories of Soul Pain Death and Healing
237
A Psychosocial Perspective
243
The Evolution of Palliative Care
251
A Voice for the Voiceless
259
Foreword Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine
269
Introduction Management of Advanced Disease
279
Index
285
71
286
79
287
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