The hospital currently consists of hospice palliative medicine specialists Wen-yuan Lin, Hua-shui Hsu, Po-tsung Huang, and Ching-chun Lin for providing palliative care outpatient services, preliminary assessment of referrals from other hospitals who have never received the hospital's palliative care, and outpatient follow-up services for patients who receive palliative care at home.
Pain is one of the most common symptoms of inpatients in the palliative care ward.
Palliative care provides active pain assessment and control and the best quality of care against cancer pain through full care of body, mind, and soul.
On top of pain, constipation, pants, loss of appetite, wound management, change of consciousness, infection, ascites, edema, and electrolyte imbalance are also common problems among terminal cancer patients, which can be relieved by drugs, nursing, and health education guidance.
Patients to receive palliative care may be hospitalized via the following three channels:
The palliative care team in the Meide ward combines with the duties and concerns of physicians, nurses, chaplains, psychologists, social workers, and volunteers to offer patients integrated care, with China Medical University Hospital (CMUH) specialties as a backup. Every day, members of the team gather to discuss the status of the patient's body, mind, and soul, brainstorm the most suitable way of intervention, and coordinate the work of the team to jointly deal with the patients' body, mind, and soul issues, so as to provide the best quality of care. The hospital’s Meide ward team is composed of the following members:
The palliative home care is aimed at the following patients:
After the patient is discharged from the hospital, we will arrange regular follow-up home visits as a continuation of hospice palliative care. Home care nurses are also a bridge of communication between the discharged patients/ their families and the Meide hospice care team.
We have promoted the idea and way of hospice care to terminal cancer patients in the non-hospice ward. By means of hospice shared care, we will gradually implement this goal, so that all terminally ill patients can obtain good care of body, mind, and soul.
The purpose of hospice shared care is to enable advanced-stage patients in the hospital to gain access to palliative care services. We have improved the palliative care skills of medical staff, patients, and their family members with the service of hospice shared care.