Dying well Health Dictionary

Dying Well: From 1 Different Sources


Dying in a way the person prefers. Dying well may include pain relief, operating at the highest possible level of functioning, resolving long-standing conflicts and satisfying final wishes.
Health Source: Community Health
Author: Health Dictionary

Dying, Care Of The

Physical and psychological care with the aim of making the final period of a dying person’s life as free from pain, discomfort, and emotional distress as possible. Carers may include doctors, nurses, other medical professionals, counsellors, social workers, clergy, family, and friends.

Pain can be relieved by regular low doses of analgesic drugs. Opioid analgesics, such as morphine, may be given if pain is severe. Other methods of pain relief include nerve blocks, cordotomy, and TENS. Nausea and vomiting may be controlled by drugs. Constipation can be treated with laxatives. Breathlessness is another common problem in the dying and may be relieved by morphine.

Towards the end, the dying person may be restless and may suffer from breathing difficulty due to heart failure or pneumonia. These symptoms can be relieved by drugs and by placing the patient in a more comfortable position.

Emotional care is as important as the relief of physical symptoms.

Many dying people feel angry or depressed and feelings of guilt or regret are common responses.

Loving, caring support from family, friends, and others is important.

Many terminally ill people prefer to die at home.

Few terminally ill patients require complicated nursing for a prolonged period.

Care in a hospice may be offered.

Hospices are small units that have been established specifically to care for the dying and their families.... dying, care of the

Dying

n. the end stage of every person’s life, lasting often for several days before the actual *death. Having a duty to save life, clinicians may fail to notice the moment when death becomes inevitable and they must now provide the care appropriate for a dying patient. This point is recognized by a change in demeanour, social involvement, and even vital signs, and in some cases the patient may tell (or try to tell) others, including professional carers, that this is happening. In the best care, after the physician recognizes the patient’s state, treatments that may be burdensome are stopped and replaced by those that may benefit someone dying: symptom relief is the key factor. See also hospice; palliative.... dying

Health And Wellbeing Board

(HWB) a statutory local authority committee that aims to improve integration between local health care, social care, and other public service providers. HWBs (of which there are over 130) also have a responsibility to reduce health inequalities and produce a local joint strategic needs assessment to inform commissioning of local services. Each upper-tier local authority is obliged under the Health and Social Care Act 2012 to have an HWB, whose membership must include: an elected local representative; the local *Directors of Public Health, adult social services, and children’s social services; and representatives from the local *Healthwatch, each local *clinical commissioning group, and *NHS England.... health and wellbeing board

Kugelberg–wellander Disease

(juvenile spinal muscular atrophy) see spinal muscular atrophy. [E. Kugelberg and L. Wellander (20th century), Swedish neurologists]... kugelberg–wellander disease



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