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The effectiveness of a mobile application for the development of palpation and ultrasound imaging skills to supplement the traditional learning of physiotherapy students

[PDF] Fernandez_ultrasound.pdf (892.8Ko)
Identificadores
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10481/49874
DOI: 10.1186/s12909-016-0775-1
ISSN: 1472-6920
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Estadísticas
Statistiques d'usage de visualisation
Metadatos
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Auteur
Fernández-Lao, Carolina; Cantarero Villanueva, Irene; Galiano Castillo, Noelia; Caro Morán, Elena; Díaz-Rodríguez, Lourdes; Arroyo Morales, Manuel
Editorial
Biomed Central
Materia
Decision making
 
Delivery of care
 
End-of-life care
 
Hospital care
 
Prognosis
 
Symptom management
 
Date
2016
Referencia bibliográfica
Fernández-Lao, C.; et al. The effectiveness of a mobile application for the development of palpation and ultrasound imaging skills to supplement the traditional learning of physiotherapy students. BMC Medical Education, 16: 274 (2016). [http://hdl.handle.net/10481/49874]
Patrocinador
This work is part of an investigative project financed by the Department of Health of the Board of Andalucía in its 2010 call for papers, titled ‘Variability of Clinical Practice and Conditional Factors in the Implementation of the Processes of Attention at End of Life’.Ref: PI-0670-2010.
Résumé
Background: Many ‘routine’ interventions performed in hospital rooms have repercussions for the comfort of the patient, and the decision to perform them should depend on whether the patient is identified as in a terminal phase. The aim of this study is to analyse the health interventions performed and decisions made in the last days of life in patients with advanced oncological and non-oncological illness to ascertain whether identifying the patient’s terminal illness situation has any effect on these decisions. Methods: Retrospective study of the clinical histories of deceased patients in four hospitals in Granada (Spain) in 2010. Clinical histories corresponding to the last three months of the patient’s life were reviewed. Results: A total of 202 clinical histories were reviewed, 60 % of which were those of non-oncology patients. Opioid prescriptions (58.4 %), palliative sedation (35.1 %) and Do Not Resuscitate (DNR) orders (34.7 %) were the decisions most often reflected in the histories, and differences in these decisions were found between patients registered as terminal and those who were not registered as terminal. The most frequent interventions in the final 14 days and 48 h were parenteral hydration (96–83 %), peripheral venous catheter (90.1–82 %) and oxygen therapy (81.2–70. 5 %). There were statistically significant differences between the patients who were registered as terminal and those not registered as terminal in the number of interventions applied in the final 14 days and 48 h (p = 0.01–p = 0.00) and in many of the described treatments. Conclusion: The recognition of a patient’s terminal status in the clinical history conditions the decisions that are made and is generally associated with a lower number of interventions.
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