Showing posts with label Palliative Care Grand Rounds. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Palliative Care Grand Rounds. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 1, 2009

Palliative Care Grand Rounds Vol. 1, Issue 6

This month's PCGR is now up at Tim Cousounis' Palliative Care Success blog. My sincere thanks to Mr. Cousounis for his great job and his contribution toward furthering the visibility of bloggers in the field of palliative care.

Now get on over there and start reading!

Wednesday, June 3, 2009

Palliative Care Grand Rounds 1.5


The fifth issue of PCGR is up and running on Angela Morrow's Palliative Care Blog at About.Com. Puh-leez get your self right on over there and ponder upon her choices for this month's Grand Rounds.


Morrow: A Fountain of Info


In fact, bookmark this wise woman's site (I have been remiss in that and shall create a link tout suite). Angela's blog is a frequent stopover for me and an excellent hospice and palliative care resource.

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Wednesday, May 6, 2009

Palliative Care Grand Rounds


PCGR is now up at Thaddeus Pope's Medical Futility Blog. Get on over there right now and read the wonderful offerings from this month's contributors. I also wholeheartedly recommend that you subscribe to Palliative Care Grand Rounds so you don't miss a thing! Okay, go now... shoo!

Monday, April 27, 2009

Palliative Care Grand Rounds


The next PCGR will be held at Thaddeus Pope's Medical Futility Blog. Please send your submissions and/or suggestions to tmpope (at) widener (dot) com. by noon Tuesday, May 5th. Palliative Care Grand Rounds will be published on Wednesday, May 6th.

Thank you for hosting, Mr. Pope!

Wednesday, April 1, 2009

PCGR: Scene 1, Take 3

Palliative Care Grand Rounds is up at Jessica Knapp's site, The Good Death. Please take some time to peruse all the great blog posts for this month.

Great job, Jessica!

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Palliative Care Grand Rounds: Vol. 1, Issue 2

Presenting PCGRrrr!

There are so many wonderful writers with thoughts to share and tales to tell that are relevant to the fields of hospice and palliative care. Here are some of my favorites for this month's PCGR. I hope that you'll visit these talented bloggers often. (Oh, and little Olive will be helping out a bit here, too!)

Drew Rosielle MD, of Pallimed, gives us an emotional full plate with his post Not Safe For Work. Here, he's found a great podcast by Mike Destafano who does a wonderful job telling the story about events leading up to the death of his girlfriend from AIDS. Drew also includes a video from The Onion entitled,
"Courageous Man Refuses to Believe He Has Cancer". It's very funny and also gives you that weird little feeling of unease. You know, like 'I don't think I should be looking at this, but I must' kind of thing.

I pretty much use Twitter to let readers know that I haven't died between posts, but Christian Sinclair MD, of Pallimed, has really put it to good use. I had no idea it could be so versatile! If you want to know how Twitter can help you and how to get started, Christian's post, Twitter For Hospice & Palliative Medicine, is a must read!

Paul Levy of Running A Hospital is also a "Twitterer". His post, Twitter Etiquette, also discusses aspects of this micro-blogging service and his mysterious, new-found popularity.

I think I just 'twittered' in the hallway.

An excerpt from Hours-to-days, a poem by Risa Denenberg of Risa's Pieces:

"They need knowledge of a kind
not previously imagined. They want
to know when. And how to wait. What to say.
Things the doctor forgot to explain."

In another post by Risa, Unfinished Business, a story is told that brings to life a term commonly used and heard in hospice and palliative care.

ONCRN returns to work after having her baby. She commemorates this event with her wonderful, so busy, yet so tired, poem back.

Amber Wollesen MD, of Pallimed: Arts & Humanities, takes a moment from her hectic day to ponder a family's "thank you" card, herself and Robert Frost in Stopping to Appreciate the Roses with Robert Frost.

Jessica Knapp of The Good Death contemplates how readily we use death metaphors in Death as a Metaphor for a Cluttered Life. Jessica also gives us a laugh with That's What a Hospital Is For.

Speaking of which... shrimplate knows what a hospital is for. The nurses (duh!). Read this nurses's take on the matter in Songs About Buildings But Not Food. Another great story from shrimplate is How Doctors Decide Whether a Patient is Sedated From Opiate Overmedication or Just Plain Dying.

Gail Rae Hudson of The Mom & Me Journals dot Net wants to explore the dying process from the "dyees" point-of-view. Much easier said than done. In her post Finally! My Kind of Snow, Gail skillfully tells of her search for answers and performs an in-depth comparison of information gleaned from The Tibetan Book of Living and Dying with her own mother's recent death.

Never one to pull punches, Leo Levy at DNR/DNI gives us a two-part story that is a "DNI" conundrum and then some. For a great read, check out Nursing on the High Wire (Part One) and Part Two. Leo also teaches us the value of putting forth a little extra effort in patient communication with Quadriplegic For Life.

Another great lesson in the value of good communication comes from Bruce Campbell MD in his post The Pre-op Visit. Read and see how "jumping to the end" can alleviate so much anxiety for the patient.

Marachne, a hospice/palliative nurse and doctoral student, takes us into her classroom as she and her students discuss a case study... but it's so much more than that. Please read this wonderful post, Expectations and Filters.

Hospice Guy gives good advice and some surprising insight into Continuous Care Issues. He really opened my eyes to this seldom discussed aspect of hospice care.

David Tribble MD, of Alive Hospice Blog touches on a phenomenon that's rather near and dear to me. His post, Visits From the Dearly Departed: Hallucinations or Sacred Encounters?, treats this subject with the respect that it deserves.

Pressure ulcers are unfortunately, an all too common problem among the dying. Angela Morrow RN, at about.com, stresses the importance of pressure ulcer prevention and knowing the risk factors. Her post, Dying with a Pressure Ulcer, serves as an important resource for all caregivers.

Fresh Widow gives us a chuckle with her "inventiveness" in her post Introducing My New (FREE) Product! The Widow Card!. Also... a memory of missing pain meds for her dying husband inspires this post, Two and a Half Years, Dozens of Anniversaries.

I find myself at a loss for words when trying to describe this blog... In October 2007, this family physician's then three-year-old son was diagnosed with a cancerous brain tumor. On February 26th of this year, little Henry died. Please spend time with Dr. Smak.

Thaddeus Mason Pope of Medical Futility has a great post, The Pope Confuses Me - The "New Eugenics".
In this article, Mr. Pope cleverly reveals an inconsistency in the Pope's (no relation, I presume) logic regarding the mind and body.

Along the same line of thought, Maurice Bernstein MD of Bioethics Discussion Blog, reviews the sad case of Eluana Englaro. This Italian case brings back many memories of our own Terry Schiavo. Dr. Bernstein's Suffering, the Unconscious and the Application of Dignity: What is the Science, What are the Ethics? boldly examines this frustrating conflict.

Let us not forget those who died in the bushfires in Victoria, Australia. Hospice and Caregiving Blog pays homage to the victims and discusses the effects of public tragedy in Mourning a Public Tragedy in Australia.

Let us also not forget all the wildlife that lost their lives in this horrible fire... Peter McCartney RN of NSW, Australia gives us this "moment of awwww" in his post Sam the Koala. As Peter so nicely states, "These clips may not seem earth shattering but for us Australians Sam shines as a representative of the millions of animals, birdlife and reptiles lost in these fires..."

Many thanks to all our readers and contributors! Next month's PCGR will be held Wednesday, April 1st at The Good Death.

Bookmark this page so you can come back
and chew on it some more!



PCGR now has subscription options; you can follow by email or RSS feed. An aggregated feed of credible, rotating health and medicine blog carnivals is also available.


Friday, February 27, 2009

PCGR: Last Call!


Palliative Care Grand Rounds, Vol. 1, Issue 2 will be held at Dethmama Chronicles on Wednesday, March 4th. The deadline for submissions will be at midnight, Sunday, March 1st (that's midnight, wherever the heck you live, before the Sunday paper hits your driveway).

The subject matter of this blog carnival can cover anything related to death and dying, hospice and palliative care, grief, care giving, business, legal and ethical issues, etc. Send a link to your submission to dethmama at g mail. com. If you run across any blog posts that you feel PCGR would be interested in, please bring it to my attention.
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Sunday, February 22, 2009

PCGR: I'm Listening...


Palliative Care Grand Rounds, Vol. 1, Issue 2 will be held at Dethmama Chronicles on Wednesday, March 4th. The deadline for submissions will be at midnight, Sunday, March 1st (that's midnight, wherever the heck you live, before the Sunday paper hits your driveway).

The subject matter of this blog carnival can cover anything related to death and dying, hospice and palliative care, grief, care giving, business, legal and ethical issues, etc. Send a link to your submission to dethmama at g mail. com. If you run across any blog posts that you feel PCGR would be interested in, please bring it to my attention.

Thank you... and I'll be nagging you all about it again, later.
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Wednesday, February 4, 2009

Palliative Care Grand Rounds: Vol. 1 Issue 1

The first Palliative Care Grand Rounds is now up at Pallimed. Please give them a visit and enjoy having a great read from all the contributors.

PCGR is a monthly blog carnival that will be held on the first Wednesday of the month. Dethmama Chronicles will be hosting the next one on Wednesday, March 4th. I'll be posting reminders and will be looking forward to your submissions and suggestions.

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