# Book Details
71

Integrated Oncology and Palliative care an Update
Year: 2014, Pages. 50, Rita Canario MD MSc, Florian Strasser MD ABHPM

A power point presentation

72

Integrated palliative care
Jeroen Hasselaar Sheila Payne (editors)
Publisher: European Association for Palliative Care
Year: September 2016, Pages. 58, ISBN 978-94-91024-15-3

This book provides the impetus for what can be done and what can be changed. The next 20 years for palliative and end-of-life care will be very different to what has gone before. Understanding the value of what integration of care can bring to patients and families is the new horizon for our discipline.

73

Integrating palliative care and symptom relief into paediatrics: a WHO guide for health care planners, implementers and managers
Publisher: WHO
Year: 2018, Pages. 96, ISBN 978-92-4-151445-3

This manual is part of a series of WHO publications on palliative care. Their objective is not to provide clinical guidelines, but rather practical guidance on integrating palliative care and symptom relief into health care systems. It is intended, to assist anyone involved with planning, implementing, managing or assuring the quality of PHC to integrate palliative care and symptom control. With this guide, WHO reiterates its commitment to answering the needs and expectations of all people, especially the most vulnerable.

74

Integrating palliative care and symptom relief into primary health care: a WHO guide for planners, implementers and managers
Publisher: World Health Organization
Year: 2018, Pages. 88, ISBN 978-92-4-151447-7

This manual is part of a series of WHO publications on palliative care. Their objective is not to provide clinical guidelines, but rather practical guidance on integrating palliative care and symptom relief into health care systems. It is intended, to assist anyone involved with planning, implementing, managing or assuring the quality of PHC to integrate palliative care and symptom control. With this guide, WHO reiterates its commitment to answering the needs and expectations of all people, especially the most vulnerable.

75

Integrating palliative care into HIV services - A practical toolkit for implementers
Publisher: Kimberly Green,Carla Horne
Year: 2012, Pages. 68, 

The purpose of this toolkit is to provide HIV care and treatment programme managers and clinicians with practical steps on how to integrate palliative care into adult and paediatric HIV services.

76

Introducing Palliative Care
Robert Twycross
Year: 2003, Pages. 123, 

Introducing Palliative Care is the manual for several foundation courses run in Oxford, India and elsewhere.

77

Journeys Palliative Care for children and teenagers
Year: 2015, Pages. 50, 

This section includes chapters on bereavement support, making memories, and celebrating anniversaries. It contains: suggestions for talking to children about dying and death, information on end-of-life decisions you should consider, a description of the dying process, detailed information about what to do when your child dies, options for funerals.

78

Manual for palliative care  Ministry of Health & Family Welfare
Publisher: Govt. of India
Year: 2005, Pages. 36, 

These manuals are developed for training health professionals and specific modules have been prepared for Cytology, Palliative Care and Tobacco Cessation. The manuals are self-explanatory and the health professionals will be able to use them on their own.

79

Metastatic colorectal cancer
Publisher: WHO, Union for International Cancer Control
Year: 2014, Pages. 10, 

Metastatic colorectal cancer is, with a few exceptions, an incurable illness. Palliative chemotherapy significantly improves survival and provides relief of symptoms in settings that have sufficient resources to administer and handle the toxicities of treatment. Multiple chemotherapy regimens are effective. The least costly regimen shown to increase survival is 5- FU/leucovorin.

80

National Guidelines for Palliative Care (Singapore)
Year: Jan 2015, Pages. 37, 

The guidelines recognise that individual patients have different needs at different phases of their illness and service providers should be responsive to patients' changing needs. In addition, families and carers need support during the patient's life and in bereavement. It also recognises the importance of training and self care for staff and the important role of volunteers in palliative care.