Symptom control for hospice patients frequently involves the use of pharmacologic agents for control of pain, dyspnea, and anxiety. Other troubling symptoms that will often require pharmacologic agents include nausea, vomiting, constipation, and delirium. While the Medicare requirement for hospice is a prognosis of six months or less, accurately predicting prognosis is very difficult.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Arterial and pulmonary artery catheters are often used in the management of critically ill patients. If heparin were not necessary to maintain the patency of arterial and pulmonary artery catheters, these patients could avoid exposure to heparin.
Objectives: The purpose of this study was to determine if the failure rate of arterial and pulmonary artery catheters differs depending on whether a nonheparinized or heparinized solution is used.
Recent Food and Drug Administration hearings on silicone gel implants have drawn attention to the paucity of information about women who seek reconstruction after mastectomy compared with those who do not. New analyses of data gathered in the early 1980s address this issue. Three groups of mastectomy patients were compared: 117 women who sought and obtained delayed reconstruction, 26 who sought but decided against delayed reconstruction, and a comparison group of 53 who were not seeking reconstruction.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF