# Book Details
111

Palliative care needs of Pediatric Patients and Their families.
Year: January 2015, Pages. 143, Lisa A. Crockett

A Phenomenological Study of Multidisciplinary Pediatric Palliative Care Team Experiences Thesis submitted in accordance with the requirements of the University of Liverpool for the degree of Doctor of Business Administration

112

Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration Clinical Manual
Publisher: Australian Government Department of Health
Year: 2018, Pages. 39, 

This manual is designed for palliative care clinicians to understand and utilise the PCOC assessment tools and data items as part of routine clinical practice.

113

Palliative Care Pocketbook 4
Publisher: Nottinghamshire STP EOL Programme Board UK
Year: 2019, Pages. 23, 

This is a guide to the management of adult palliative care patients; it supersedes previous versions of the Palliative Care Pocketbook. The choice of medicine and dosage remains the responsibility of the prescribing clinician. The dosage required by a patient will depend on a number of factors (e.g. age, weight, frailty, renal function) and these will need to be taken into account for each clinical situation.

114

Palliative Care Service Development Guidelines
Publisher: Palliative Care Australia
Year: Jan 2018, Pages. 36, 

These Guidelines have been developed to articulate PCA's expectations for the palliative care system and service design through a populationbased approach.

115

Palliative Care State Toolkit
Publisher: The National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization
Year: 2019, Pages. 42, 

The National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization (NHPCO) and the Hospice Action Network (HAN) created the State Palliative Care Toolkit as a resource to assess access to palliative care in the United States. Our hope is that the toolkit will assist state coalitions and leaders to develop palliative care legislation to improve access to these valuable services for seriously ill individuals and their families.

116

Palliative Care Symptom Control Guidelines
Publisher: Wirral Palliative Care
Year: 2019, Pages. 74, 

Adapted from: Greater Manchester Strategic Clinical Network Guidelines. Many drugs are used in palliative care outside their licensed indication, dose or route of administration at the prescriber's discretion. The inclusion of a drug, dose or treatment in these guidelines does not absolve the prescriber of their personal responsibility in providing treatment that they are confident with, can justify and that is tailored to the individual patient. For details of licensed indications see the current BNF

117

Palliative Care Symptom Guide
Publisher: UPMC Palliative And Supportive Institute
Year: July 2019, Pages. 27, 

Principles of Opioid Therapy, Throughout Opioid Therapy: Monitor for the 4As, Commonly Available oral Opopid formulations, Opioid Analgesic Equivalencies

118

Palliative Care Symptom Guide
Publisher: UPMC Palliative and Supportive Institute
Year: July 2019, Pages. 27, 

Pain Management, Adjuvant and Non Opioid Agents for Pain , Principles of Opioid Therapy, Dyspnea m Nausea and Vomiting Treatment, Delirium, Depression and Anxiety Treatmentm Oral Secretions

119

Palliative Care Toolkit - Improving care from the roots up in resource-limited settings
Dr Vicky Lavy, Dr Charlie Bond and Ruth Wooldridge
Year: 2008, Pages. 106, ISBN: 978-0-9928277-1-7

This toolkit is an introduction and basic text in palliative care. At the end of each chapter are references to help you find more detail on the topics covered.

120

Palliative Care: symptom management and end-of-life care
Publisher: WHO
Year: 2004, Pages. 26, 

This module provides guidelines to prepare health workers to provide palliative care treatment and advice in clinic and to back up community caregivers and family members who need to provide home-based palliative care. For each symptom, the guidelines for the health worker include both a summary of non-pharmaceutical recommendations for home care and the clinical management and medications which the health worker might also provide, based on a limited essential drug list on the last page of this module. Alternative or additional drugs can be added during country adaptation. The home care advice also appears in a Caregiver Booklet which is illustrated. Health workers should use it to prepare families and community-caregivers to care for patients at home. This needs to be locally adapted.