Enhancing care of older adults through standardizing palliative care education

Article indépendant

DAVIS, Andra | DUKART-HARRINGTON, Kristine

Nursing skill in caring for persons with serious chronic illness is increasingly in demand as the proportion of older adults in the United States increases. There is robust evidence that palliative care education among health care providers influences the reduction of death anxiety and avoidance behavior, while positively impacting self-efficacy and comfort, when caring for persons with serious illness or those nearing death. The international recognition of access to palliative care as a universal human right drives the need for education to adequately prepare nurses who have not been properly prepared for this work. The development of national competencies in palliative care education for nurses is an important step in synthesizing and disseminating available evidence in support of palliative care nursing education. These recently published competencies can lead to policy innovations at local, state, and national levels. Identifying competencies that lead to more clearly defined curricula will ultimately improve standardizing education and improve nursing practice in caring for older adults with serious chronic illness and their families.

http://dx.doi.org/10.3928/00989134-20230512-02

Voir la revue «Journal of gerontological nursing, 49»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of gerontological nursing»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Enhancing care of older adults through standa...

Article | DAVIS, Andra | Journal of gerontological nursing | n°6 | vol.49

Nursing skill in caring for persons with serious chronic illness is increasingly in demand as the proportion of older adults in the United States increases. There is robust evidence that palliative care education among health care...

Enhancing care of older adults through standa...

Article indépendant | DAVIS, Andra | Journal of gerontological nursing | n°6 | vol.49

Nursing skill in caring for persons with serious chronic illness is increasingly in demand as the proportion of older adults in the United States increases. There is robust evidence that palliative care education among health care...

Palliative and end-of-life care for lesbian, ...

Article | CLOYES, Kristin G. | Seminars in oncology nursing | n°1 | vol.34

OBJECTIVE: To identify the unique needs of lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender (LGBT) cancer patients and caregivers, and review recommendations supporting more effective and inclusive palliative and end-of-life care. DATA SOU...

De la même série

Leveraging artificial intelligence/machine le...

Article indépendant | BRESSLER, Toby | Journal of gerontological nursing | n°1 | vol.51

PURPOSE: The current review examined the application of artificial intelligence (AI) and machine learning (ML) techniques in palliative care, specifically focusing on models used to identify potential beneficiaries of palliative s...

Academic-clinical collaborations to build und...

Article indépendant | OSAKWE, Zainab Toteh | Journal of gerontological nursing | n°6 | vol.49

With the current shortage of hospice/palliative care (HPC) workforce, there is an urgent need to train a generation of nurses with clinical competency in HPC to ensure equitable access and optimal care for patients living with ser...

Enhancing care of older adults through standa...

Article indépendant | DAVIS, Andra | Journal of gerontological nursing | n°6 | vol.49

Nursing skill in caring for persons with serious chronic illness is increasingly in demand as the proportion of older adults in the United States increases. There is robust evidence that palliative care education among health care...

Psychosocial well-being of older spouses duri...

Article indépendant | PETERS, Sanne | Journal of gerontological nursing | n°6 | vol.48

Specific burdens of older spousal caregivers often remain invisible, and spousal caregivers rarely receive the support they need to perform their role. To provide suitable support for spousal caregivers, it is crucial to develop a...

End-of-life care communication in long-term c...

Article indépendant | BENNETT, Frank B. | Journal of gerontological nursing | n°7 | vol.47

RNs in long-term care (LTC) are a critical nexus for end-of-life (EOL) care communication with older adult residents and their families. A critical review of 17 qualitative research studies examined nurses' experience with EOL car...

Chargement des enrichissements...