What Do You Need to Know About Palliative Care?



What is Palliative Care? 

Palliative care is frequently underutilized due to a lack of knowledge about what it comprises. When most patients hear the words “palliative care,” they immediately get concerned that they may be dying.

Palliative care isn’t just for terminally ill people, and it’s not the same as hospice care. Palliative care is for any patient with a chronic illness whose quality of life is diminishing due to symptoms associated with their illness or treatment.

 

A Viable Option For You

Unfortunately, many patients with chronic illnesses are unaware of palliative care as a viable option due to this misperception. It is commonly assumed that it is for cancer patients, although this is never the case. Palliative care is also useful for patients with heart illness, lung disease, neurological ailments, and dementia.

Chronic illnesses causing pain, fatigue, or nausea which impairs the patient negatively impacts their life. It is Advanced Health Care’s thrust to improve the patient’s life through palliative care. As it is, palliative care can make your life — and the lives of those who care for you — considerably easier if you’ve been diagnosed with a serious, long-term sickness or a life-threatening illness.

 

Providing You with The Best Healthcare Specialists

Palliative care teams are healthcare professionals who collaborate with you, your family, and your other doctors to provide you with the best possible treatment. Palliative care is provided by a specially-trained team of doctors, nurses and other specialists who work together with a patient’s other doctors to provide an extra layer of support. When you need it the most, they provide an extra layer of support. They will be there for you every step of the process. The palliative care staff will also take the time to assist you match your treatment options to your objectives. This will improve your quality of life by giving you more control over your care.

 

The #1 Goal of Palliative Care

Palliative care’s primary purpose is to alleviate pain and improve the quality of life for patients and their families. The Advanced Health Care team will assist you in regaining the strength to continue with your everyday activities. Along with treatments, therapies, and medicines aimed at treating your condition.

Palliative care is based on the needs of the patient, not on the patient’s prognosis. It is made sure that all of  your doctors know and understand what you want. This gives you more control over your care and will improve your quality of life as there is no reason to believe that the patient is dying. Palliative care does serve many people with terminal illnesses but some are cured and no longer need palliative care. 

 

Palliative Care Improves Lives

Palliative care improves the quality of life for patients who are suffering from serious illnesses. It prevents or relieves disease and treatment-related symptoms and negative effects. Palliative care helps people cope with the emotional, social, practical, and spiritual issues that come with illness. When the person feels better in these areas, they have an improved quality of life. It is a fact that patients with a serious illness who received palliative care are given the chance to live longer than those who did not receive this care.

 

Key Takeaway

It must be understood that when a person is diagnosed with a serious illness, they should be immediately provided with advance care planning together with their family and doctors. This will satisfy the patients with the kind of care they will receive which of course will also be aligned with their wishes. 

Palliative care is comforting to any patient who needs it as  it puts the patient’s desires, goals and decisions first. It provides support not only to the patient but also to the family. It provides clarity to the treatment plans and improves the patient’s quality of life.

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