Publications by authors named "Vicki Kennedy"

Interior Health in British Columbia advocates for and supports advanced practice nurses, inclusive of regional clinical nurse specialists (CNSs). CNSs develop evidence-informed programs, education, policies and practice standards. The article uses an advanced practice nursing framework to anchor two case studies: (1) the operationalization and implementation of a regional CNS role in primary care and (2) the use of a knowledge translation strategy to build clinical capacity in serious illness conversations.

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Communication is vital to quality palliative care nursing particularly when caring for someone with a chronic life-limiting illness and their family. Conversations about future decline and preferred care are considered challenging and difficult and are often avoided, resulting in missed opportunities for improving care. To support more, earlier, better conversations, health care organizations in British Columbia, Canada, adopted the Serious Illness Care Program inclusive of the Serious Illness Conversation Guide developed by Ariadne Labs.

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Objective: A model of psychosocial care specific for patients with multiple myeloma and their caregivers has not yet been proposed. We sought to develop a model of care that considers the specific profile of this disease.

Method: The authors, representing a multidisciplinary care team, met in December of 2012 to identify a model of psychosocial care for patients with multiple myeloma and their caregivers.

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With the current focus on improving efficiencies and quality of care within the Canadian healthcare system, primary healthcare (PHC) is receiving renewed attention. The time is right for highlighting the value that registered nurses (RNs) can bring to collaborative practice in primary care settings. This paper discusses the untapped utilization of RNs in primary care in Canada, arguing for a strong leadership role for nurses and citing examples of RN services that could enhance care and improve population health and cost-effectiveness.

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In 2015, the American College of Surgeons (ACoS) Commission on Cancer will require cancer centers to implement screening programs for psychosocial distress as a new criterion for accreditation. A joint task force from the American Psychosocial Oncology Society, the Association of Oncology Social Work, and the Oncology Nursing Society developed consensus-based recommendations to guide the implementation of this requirement. In this review, the authors provide recommendations regarding each of the 6 components necessary to meet the ACoS standard: 1) inclusion of psychosocial representation on the cancer committee, 2) timing of screening, 3) method/mode of screening, 4) tools for screening, 5) assessment and referral, and 6) documentation.

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A number of single gene mutations in laboratory mice produce hair follicle defects resulting in deformed hair shafts. The radiation-induced (SB/LeJ-Foxq1(sa)) satin mutant mice have a satin-like sheen to their hair and dilute colouration. This sheen is due to failure of the hair shafts to develop normal medullas, while the pigment dilution is due to the unrelated beige (lysosomal trafficking regulator, Lyst(bg)) mutation.

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Objective: In 2009, the APOS commissioned a survey of its members and attendees of the annual meetings in 2008 and 2009. The goal of the survey was to assess the scope of psychosocial support services for cancer patients in the USA.

Methods: Two hundred thirty-three individuals (27% response rate) completed the survey, which included questions assessing the extent to which respondents' institutions provided informational and psychosocial support services and conducted screening for psychosocial distress.

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Dyspnea is a cardinal symptom of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), and its severity and magnitude increases as the disease progresses, leading to significant disability and a negative effect on quality of life. Refractory dyspnea is a common and difficult symptom to treat in patients with advanced COPD. There are many questions concerning optimal management and, specifically, whether various therapies are effective in this setting.

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As the Association of Oncology Social Work celebrates its 25th year, we pause to reflect on the many historical threads that contributed to its development and hear from each of the presidents who helped create the organization, as we know it today. Set within hospitals, medical social work was born in the early 20th century. In the 1940s medical social work became necessary for hospital accreditation.

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Objective: The aim of this study was to determine whether it is possible to predict a normal outcome of the bithermal caloric test by testing at a single temperature and if so, what criteria are most appropriate to use.

Design: A total of 490 patients were considered candidates for the bithermal test and 414 completed the four necessary components, their nystagmus being measured using videonystagmography.

Results: Clinical decision analysis revealed that the cool monothermal test does not provide an adequate combination of sensitivity and specificity for us to recommend its clinical use.

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Little information has been published on interventions designed to help school personnel respond to challenges faced by a family dealing with parental cancer. The current study describes the development and piloting of a program that educated school professionals about cancer's impact on families, and effective ways of supporting families facing parental cancer. The program was implemented at four sites; 244 participants completed self-report questionnaires before and after the program assessing knowledge and anxiety about helping families.

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Objectives: A number of stimulus presentation features of the tone burst-evoked N1-P2 cortical response were investigated to identify any advantage over simple stimulation when the test is used for hearing threshold estimation. The speed of establishing objective thresholds at 1, 3, and 8 kHz in both ears was also measured in what was designed to be an efficient test protocol, together with the precision of the threshold estimates with reference to subjects' conventional audiograms.

Design: Twenty-four volunteer subjects were recruited and tested by both behavioral and electrophysiological methods.

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