Browse Items (7 total)
- Tags: Wisconsin
Advance directives in a pediatric emergency department.
Center to Advance Palliative Care palliative care consultation service metrics: consensus recommendations
Cudahy high school survey and focus groups: assessment of the needs of a teen population. A community-campus collaboration
Tags: 2000, Adolescent, Adolescent Health Services/organization & administration, Backlog, Community Health Nursing/education/organization & administration, Cooperative Behavior, Doerr BT, Female, Focus Groups, Humans, Interinstitutional Relations, Journal Article, Male, Needs Assessment/organization & administration, Public Health Nursing (boston, Mass.), School Health Services/organization & administration, School Nursing/organization & administration, Universities/organization & administration, Wantuch C, Wisconsin
Experience with neonatal palliative care consultation at the Medical College of Wisconsin-Children's Hospital of Wisconsin
Long-term effects of the death of a child on parents' adjustment in midlife
Tags: 2008, Adaptation, Adolescent, Adult, Backlog, Bereavement, Bereavement Leave Policy Paper, Death, Depressive Disorder/diagnosis/etiology/psychology, Family Conflict/psychology, Female, Floyd FJ, Follow-up Studies, Greenberg J, Grief, Health Status, Hong J, Humans, Journal Article, Journal Of Family Psychology, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Marriage/psychology, Middle Aged, Parents/psychology, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, Psychological, Psychological/diagnosis/etiology/psychology, Rogers CH, Seltzer MM, Stress, Time, Wisconsin
Pediatric advance care planning.
Tags: 2005, 7 died at home and 2 died at a hospital. Eight of the children's advance directives were followed during the dying process, 9 are deceased, Advance Care Planning/og [Organization & Administration], Advance Care Planning/organization & Administration, Backlog, Child, DNAR, DNAR Outcomes, Female, Hammes BJ, Humans, including preserving their child's quality of life and avoiding unnecessary suffering., individuals in the community raised concerns about the child's advance directive. CONCLUSIONS: Even though the topic of their child's death is difficult, Infant, Interviews As Topic, Journal Article, Journal of Palliative Medicine, Kempf M, Klevan J, Male, Newborn, Parents/psychology, Parents/px [psychology], Pediatrics, PedPal Lit, Preschool, the majority of the interviewed parents found the advance care planning process for the child helpful because it assured the best care for the child, while 1 was not. Th irteen parents were interviewed. Twelve stated that the process of advance care planning benefited their children and their family. Rarely, Williams MS, Wisconsin