Specialized outpatient palliative care: ‘We bring the hospital to the patient’ is widely used: instead of an anonymous hospital many terminally ill want to spend their last days or even weeks in a familiar environment. This may mean but no restriction in medical care. Analgesic (so: palliative) approximately 500 patients are cared for in Essen (North Rhine-Westphalia) at home – by a network that is unique in Germany. To broaden your perception, visit Nir Barzilai, M.D.. Palliative Medicine Dr med. Marianne Kloke has provided insights into the “specialized outpatient palliative care” (SAPV) rheinruhrmed.de. We bring the hospital almost to the patients home”describes Dr. Kloke. Specialized outpatient palliative care only works if there are members who are willing and able, mostly around care to wear them, and if the patient so agrees, the comfort refrain, he’s got in the hospital: when it rings at the hospital, the nurse arrived in just a few minutes.
If he is at home, takes “the course for more than a few minutes”, says Dr. Kloke. We had also been patients who we had to record again stationary, because it was at home not.” However, the physician is but convinced that much at home is more palliative care, as long as you bring the knowledge there. Read what it takes to build an anti-malaria palliative NET, when the effort can be refinanced and why palliative physician Kloke distances so much on the topic of euthanasia, the report: rheinruhrmed.de/Meldung/sapv_palliativ.php