Psychosocial Aspects of Palliative Care

Psychosocial Aspects of Palliative Care

Psychosocial Aspects of Palliative Care

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Communication Essentials - Breaking Barriers Gently

Vital for trust and shared decisions. Key tools:

  • SPIKES Protocol (📌): Structured approach for breaking bad news.
  • NURSE Mnemonic (📌): Guiding empathetic responses.
    • N: Name the emotion
    • U: Understand patient's feelings
    • R: Respect patient's experience
    • S: Support the patient
    • E: Explore patient's concerns
  • Discussing Prognosis:
    • Acknowledge and manage uncertainty.
    • Balance hope with realism carefully.
  • Advance Care Planning (ACP):
    • Components: Living will, healthcare proxy/power of attorney.
    • Importance: Ensures patient autonomy, clarifies care goals, reduces family burden.

⭐ The 'S' in SPIKES (Setting up the interview) is crucial for effective communication.

Mind Matters - Navigating Emotions

  • Depression:
    • Screen: PHQ-2/PHQ-9 (adapted).
    • Dx: Persistent low mood, anhedonia, hopelessness.
    • Mgmt: Psychosocial support, counselling; SSRIs (e.g., Sertraline) first-line.
  • Anxiety:
    • Common: GAD, panic, adjustment disorder.
    • Assess: Severity, impact on QoL.
    • Mgmt: Relaxation techniques, CBT principles; short-term benzodiazepines (cautiously).
  • Delirium: (📌 Use CAM for assessment)
    • Features: Acute onset, fluctuating course, inattention, disorganized thinking/altered consciousness.
    • Reversible Causes (📌 PINCH ME): Pain, Infection, Nutrition, Constipation, Hydration, Medication, Electrolytes.
    • Mgmt: Treat cause; Haloperidol 0.5-1mg for severe agitation/psychosis.
  • Grief vs. Depression:
    FeatureGriefDepression
    Self-esteemPreservedOften ↓, worthlessness
    ExperienceEmptiness/loss, in wavesPersistent low mood, anhedonia
  • Kübler-Ross Stages (📌 DABDA): Denial, Anger, Bargaining, Depression, Acceptance. Limitations: not linear, stages may be revisited.

⭐ Pain and depression often coexist in palliative care, forming a vicious cycle and exacerbating each other.

Social & Spiritual Support - Holistic Harmony

  • Family Dynamics:
    • Family meetings: shared understanding, decision-making.
    • Key family member/spokesperson: for communication.
  • Caregiver Burden:
    • Assess: Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI).
    • Signs: anxiety, depression, fatigue, social withdrawal.
    • Support: respite care, counseling, psychoeducation.
  • Spiritual Assessment (FICA 📌):
    • Faith: "What are your spiritual beliefs?"
    • Importance/Influence: "How important is your faith? How does it influence coping?"
    • Community: "Are you part of a spiritual community?"
    • Address/Action: "How can we support your spiritual needs?"
  • Indian Cultural Context:
    • Disclosure: often to family; ascertain patient preference.
    • Family: central role in care & decisions.
    • Rituals: respect EOL rituals (e.g., prayers, Ganga jal).
  • Team Roles:
    • Social Worker: practical aid, resources, counseling.
    • Psychologist: emotional support, coping strategies.
    • Spiritual Counselor: spiritual guidance, existential concerns.

⭐ Unaddressed spiritual distress can significantly impact a patient's quality of life and pain perception.

  • Autonomy: Patient's right to self-determination (e.g., advance directives, refusing LST).
  • Beneficence: Acting in patient's best interest (e.g., optimal symptom control).
  • Non-maleficence: "Do no harm"; avoid burdensome/futile interventions.
  • Justice: Fair allocation of palliative resources; equitable access.

Informed Consent & Capacity:

  • Consent: Requires disclosure, understanding, voluntariness, capacity.
  • Capacity Assessment: Patient can understand, appreciate, reason, communicate choice.

Confidentiality:

  • Uphold patient privacy. Limits: harm to self/others, legal duty.

Withholding/Withdrawing Life-Sustaining Treatment (LST):

  • Ethically justified by autonomy or futility.
  • Legally, passive euthanasia permissible in India (Aruna Shanbaug case); living wills valid.

Doctrine of Double Effect (DDE):

  • Permits actions with good primary intent (e.g., pain relief) despite foreseen, unintended negative effects (e.g., hastened death with opioids), if benefit outweighs harm.

⭐ The 'Doctrine of Double Effect' is ethically permissible when the primary intention is to relieve suffering, even if life is inadvertently shortened.

Medical Futility:

  • Intervention lacks meaningful benefit; grounds for limiting LST.

High‑Yield Points - ⚡ Biggest Takeaways

  • SPIKES protocol for breaking bad news is a cornerstone of communication.
  • Routine screening for anxiety and depression is mandatory in palliative care.
  • Address anticipatory grief in patients and families; support bereavement.
  • Spiritual assessment (e.g., FICA) is integral to holistic care.
  • Caregiver burden assessment and support are crucial for family well-being.
  • Ethical principles (autonomy, beneficence) guide complex end-of-life decisions.
  • Prioritize burnout prevention for both caregivers and healthcare professionals.

Practice Questions: Psychosocial Aspects of Palliative Care

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Flashcards: Psychosocial Aspects of Palliative Care

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