ABSTRACT

Collaborative Practice in Palliative Care explores how different professions work collaboratively across professional, institutional, social, and cultural boundaries to enhance palliative care.

Analysing palliative care as an interaction between different professionals, clients, and carers, and the social context or community within which the interaction takes place, it is grounded in up-to-date evidence, includes global aspects of palliative care and cultural diversity as themes running throughout the book, and is replete with examples of good and innovative practice. Drawing on experiences from within traditional specialist palliative care settings like hospices and community palliative care services, as well as more generalist contexts of the general hospital and primary care, this practical text highlights the social or public health model of palliative care. Designed to support active learning, it includes features such as case studies, summaries, and pointers to other learning resources.

This text is an important reference for all professionals engaged in palliative care, particularly those studying for post-qualification programmes in the area.

 

 

chapter 2|14 pages

The importance of place

Collaboration across institutional boundaries

chapter 3|12 pages

Seeing a familiar face

Collaboration across professional boundaries

chapter 4|11 pages

Caring for the person in their world

Collaboration in context

chapter 5|10 pages

Systems within systems

Collaboration with the family

chapter 6|10 pages

Building bridges

Collaboration between organisations

chapter 7|13 pages

Psychological care

Everybody's business?

chapter 8|16 pages

Compassionate communities

Working with marginalised populations

chapter 9|12 pages

Collaboration in palliative care

Global perspectives

chapter 10|11 pages

The future

Developing collaborative palliative care