Services
Services
Services
Offered in
Palliative
and Hospice
Care
Mangabat Allison Mae T
Palliative care
+ People may continue to need palliative and supportive care after cancer
treatment is complete and into long-term survivorship.
For instance, some physical side effects can last after treatment ends or new
side effects can appear later. Doctors call these "late effects." Ask your doctor
if your specific treatment is likely to cause any late effects. Learn more about
the long-term and late effects of cancer treatment.
+ Palliative care specialists can help treat late effects of cancer. This is an
important part of survivorship care.
+ Getting support for physical side effects
+ Physical side effects of cancer and its treatment depend on several
factors, can range from mild to severe, and often vary from person to
person.
+ Factors include the type of cancer, its stage, the treatment given, and your
general health. Physical side effects can include:
+ Pain
+ Fatigue (being very tired)
+ Nausea, vomiting, and loss of appetite
+ Breathing problems, such as being short of breath
+ Sleep problems
+ Sexual health changes
emotional support
+ Palliative and supportive care options for mental health can
include counseling, exercise, meditation, and possibly
medication to help.
social support
+ Social support means having people around you who care for
you and help you with the challenges of cancer, its treatment,
and daily life.
+ This includes help from members of your cancer care team,
including social workers.
+ Palliative care requires a team of doctors, nurses, assistants, and
specialists.
+ Palliative care physician: A palliative care physician is a doctor who is
trained to consider palliative care in their practice. They might focus on
terminal illnesses such as cancer or heart failure.
+ Palliative nurse: Palliative nurses provide basic medical care and
sometimes offer counseling to patients.
+ Social worker: A social worker works on a palliative care team to
provide resources for patients, such as access to community-based
support, transportation, or therapy.
+ Therapist: Therapists are often part of palliative care to provide
emotional and mental health support to patients.
+ Hospice nurse: If and when patients switch from palliative to hospice
care, a hospice nurse is trained to specifically focus on quality of life,
comfort, and happiness in one’s final days.
+ Home health aide: Sometimes, palliative care is delivered at home.
A home health aide provides assistance with taking medication, cooking
and eating food, and other essential tasks.
Hospice care
+ provided to patients near the end of life, with a high risk of dying in
the next six months and who will no longer benefit from or have
chosen to forego further disease-related treatment.
+ https://www.cancer.net/coping-with-cancer/physical-emotional-
and-social-effects-cancer/types-palliative-and-supportive-care
+ https://www.health.harvard.edu/blog/what-is-palliative-care-and
-who-can-benefit-from-it-2019111118186
+ https://www.hospiceuk.org/information-and-support/your-guide
-hospice-and-end-life-care/im-looking-hospice-care/what-servic
es