Husband, Father, Assistant Professor of Emergency Medicine and Palliative Medicine, Wake Forest School of Medicine, My account and views, Not medical advice
You'll often find us in the fine print or parentheses. Behind the scenes, our platform powers innovators, educators & researchers like these. Thank you to Dr. David Wang & authors for trusting our software to support your research. onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/…
Night Nurse made this and gave it to an upset dementia patient. Instant solution. Patient smiled and proudly showed me “my bear”, now hugging it and sleeping soundly.
Elder mistreatment & depression can have a dual relationship in older adults. Our Delirium, Dementia and Depression Module offers helpful info on how these conditions connect to elder mistreatment. Access the module, eligible for AMA & ANCC credits, here: gedcollaborative.com/course/…
New Podcast at PalliEM.org Episode 6 – Exploring Palliative Care Integration in Community Emergency Medicine – with Dr. Suzanne Bigelow, MD bit.ly/3OIkkSO
Excited to announce a new section for featured resources at PalliEM.org New review posted for "United States Best Practice Guidelines for Primary Palliative Care in the Emergency Department" by Loffredo A, et al bit.ly/3Penfnc
Excited to announce a new section for featured resources at PalliEM.org New review posted for "United States Best Practice Guidelines for Primary Palliative Care in the Emergency Department" by Loffredo A, et al bit.ly/3Penfnc
What the world needs more than sympathy and empathy is compassion.
Sympathy: I'm sorry you're in pain
Empathy: I feel your pain
Compassion: I'll do whatever I can to alleviate your pain
You don't have to feel other people's feelings. You just have to care about their feelings.
Happy to see the positive feedback with start of @PalliEM_org.A network is quickly developing. Unfortunately,I have been making 2 many clicks and follows so the algorithm thinks it's a bot at the moment.Waiting 4an unlock from cust supp and I can get back 2 tweets of new content
The majority (89.9%) of hospital transfer patients who died within 72hrs didn’t have ACP discussions documented prior to transfer, although most transitioned to comfort measures soon after transfer escholarship.org/uc/item/51q…@WFCTSI@WakePCCM@WakeEMresidency
HOT OFF THE PRESS...congrats @JustinBrooten .......The majority (89.9%) of hospital transfer patients who died within 72hrs didn’t have ACP discussions documented prior to transfer, although most transitioned to comfort measures soon after transfer escholarship.org/uc/item/51q…