Publications by authors named "P Enright"

The unprecedented 2021 Heat Dome caused wide-ranging and long-lasting impacts in western Canada, including 619 confirmed heat-related deaths in British Columbia, a doubling of emergency medical calls, increased hospitalisations, infrastructure failures and stress on plants and animals. However, such varied socio-economic consequences of extreme heat can be challenging to capture using a single post-event analysis method. Therefore, there is a need to explore alternative approaches and data sources.

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Background: The teaching of palliative care competencies is an essential component of undergraduate medical education. There is significant variance in the palliative care content delivered in undergraduate medical curricula, revealing the utility of reference standards to guide curricular development and assessment. To evaluate our university's undergraduate palliative care teaching, we undertook a curriculum mapping exercise, comparing official learning objectives to the national Educating Future Physicians in Palliative and End-of-Life Care (EFPPEC) and the international Palliative Education Assessment Tool (PEAT) reference objectives.

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Background: Severe grief is highly distressing and prevalent up to 1 year post-death among people bereaved during the first wave of COVID-19, but no study has assessed changes in grief severity beyond this timeframe.

Aim: Understand the trajectory of grief during the pandemic by reassessing grief symptoms in our original cohort 12-18 months post-death.

Design: Prospective matched cohort study.

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Context: During the summer of 2021, western Canada experienced a deadly heat event. From the first heat alert to postevent reporting, thousands of media articles were published that reference the heat event. However, a gap remains in understanding how this communication chain-from the release of a public heat alert to information shared through media outlets to the public-currently operates to disseminate heat-related messaging across Canada.

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Article Synopsis
  • The study aimed to compare the comorbidities and end-of-life (EoL) medication usage among patients who died before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • It involved analyzing records of decedents from three Ottawa hospitals, categorizing them into prepandemic and two intrapandemic groups, one with COVID-19 and one without, totaling 425 decedents.
  • Results indicated that COVID-19 positive patients had higher rates of symptoms like dementia, breathlessness, cough, and fever, and they received higher doses of opioids, particularly morphine, compared to pre-COVID and COVID-negative groups.
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