Attitudes of house officers toward a hospice on a medical service
- PMID: 6194299
- DOI: 10.1097/00001888-198310000-00003
Attitudes of house officers toward a hospice on a medical service
Abstract
A hospice program (HP) was established on the medical service at the Denver Veterans Administration Medical Center (DVAMC) for the care of the terminally ill cancer patients and to integrate such care into house staff training. A two-bed inpatient unit was managed by an intern, a resident, and the attending physician with the aid of a multidisciplinary team. During the program's first year, 29 patients were cared for with an average inpatient stay of 26 days. Twenty-nine out of a possible 33 house officers returned questionnaires evaluating their hospice experience. Twenty-eight respondents felt that the hospice program was appropriate in a teaching hospital. Over half indicated improved awareness of the psychological problems of their patients and families. Two-thirds of the house staff members felt that the HP changed their approach to pain control and made them more comfortable in dealing with terminally ill patients. From this study, it can be concluded that a hospice program can be successfully integrated into an active medical teaching service.
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