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Showing posts with label Support. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Support. Show all posts

Friday, August 9, 2013

Civic duty is creative art charity support and a smile

Beverly Hills, California (press BOX) 10 July 2013

Civic duty and co-founder Julian Omidi and Dr. Michael Omidi announce their support for the love smile through the arts, an organization brings interactive art appreciation programs for young children and adults with chronic, potentially terminal diseases as well as their families dedicated to. The charity strategy is twofold: give those with serious medical conditions a voice through their creativity and art, and second, to promote the environmental design of hospitals and medical facilities to relieve stress and healing resilience.

"Creative arts programs and inspiring environment are vital, intellectual, emotional and spiritual development," says co-founder Dr. Michael Omidi civic duty. "Smiles through art gives people, severe illnesses suffer opportunity for self exploration and healing, which is like sunshine in their dark circumstances." Civic duty is proud to help this organization and be a part of their mission."

Smile was founded by art (http://www.smilesthroughart.blogspot.com) by Sharon Persovski, graphic and environmental designer with a passion for art, design, and development. Persovski, has decided to throngs of experience in the design of major international projects - from shopping malls in Japan, Singapore, and Mexico luxury spas and hotels in Las Vegas, and China has to her work many years as an accomplished environmental designer - help in great distress. The organization helps people with degenerative diseases to explore different ways of emotional healing. Adults and children may in particular their creative instincts to use to navigate their fears and anxieties about their illnesses in a way that broadens their horizons.

Persovski is an advocate of the use of environmental design as a process of positive effects on the health of people. She believes that the physical environment has significant impact on the reduction of stress for patients and caregivers, increase the quality of care and above all improve the treatment results. Smile works health care administrators and emergency type closely with doctors, aid workers, becoming art projects in hospitals and health care institutions around the world, not only in the United States, but in other countries including Mexico and Afghanistan.

Civic duty (http://www.civicduty.org) devoted to sense search of mankind and promotes the values of its founders, philanthropist Julian Omidi and his brother Dr. Michael Omidi. The charity is to inspire creative, social hours community service and volunteering through the stories of everyday people who make an extraordinary difference in the world. Mahatma Gandhi once said: "The man becomes very accurate in the degree in which he works for the welfare of his fellow men." To engage and to contribute, make a difference, send us a message via the website contact function. For more information about the civic duty, on Facebook, Pinterest, Google + and Twitter.



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Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Study Examines Spiritual Support For Patients With Advanced Cancer

Main Category: Cancer / Oncology
Article Date: 08 May 2013 - 2:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Study Examines Spiritual Support For Patients With Advanced Cancer
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JAMA Internal Medicine Study Highlights

A study by Tracy A. Balboni, M.D., M.P.H., of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, and colleagues suggests that spiritual care and end-of-life (EoL) discussions by the medical team may be associated with reduced aggressive treatment.

The study included 343 patients with advanced cancer. EoL care in the final week included hospice, aggressive EoL measures (care in an intensive care unit, resuscitation or ventilation), and ICU death.

Patients reporting high spiritual support from religious communities were less likely to receive hospice (adjusted odds ratio [AOR], 0.37), more likely to receive aggressive EoL measures (AOR, 2.62), and more likely to die in an ICU (AOR, 5.22), according to the results. The results also indicate that among patients well-supported by religious communities, receiving spiritual support from the medical team was associated with higher rates of hospice use (AOR, 2.37), fewer aggressive treatments ((AOR, 0.23), fewer ICU deaths (AOR, 0.19) and EoL discussions were associated with fewer aggressive interventions (AOR, 0.12).

"In conclusion, terminally ill patients receiving high spiritual support from religious communities receive more-intensive EoL medical care, including less hospice, more aggressive interventions, and more ICU deaths, particularly among racial/ethnic minority and high religious coping patients," the study concludes. "The provision of spiritual care and EoL discussions by medical teams to patients highly supported by religious communities is associated with reduced medical care intensity near death."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our cancer / oncology section for the latest news on this subject. JAMA Internal Med. Published online May 6, 2013. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.903. Please use one of the following formats to cite this article in your essay, paper or report:

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Wednesday, May 29, 2013

Study reveals widespread support for rationing of certain Types of cancer care

Main Category: Cancer / Oncology
Article Date: 18 May 2013-0:00 PDT Current ratings for:
Study Finds Broad Support For Rationing Of Some Types Of Cancer Care
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The majority of cancer doctors, patients, and members of the general public support cutting health care costs by refusing to pay for drugs that don't improve survival or quality of life, according to results of a new study that will be presented by researchers from the Perelman School of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania during the annual meeting of the American Society of Clinical Oncology in Chicago in early June (Abstract #6518).

The Penn Medicine team surveyed 326 adult cancer patients receiving treatment at Penn's Abramson Cancer Center, a random sample of 891 adults in the general public, and 250 oncologists across the United States during 2012 to probe their opinions about tactics for controlling costs associated with cancer care.

"We found that the majority of respondents considered Medicare spending a big or moderate problem, and many suggested that Medicare could spend less without causing harm," said the study's lead author, John Gogineni, MD, MSHP, an instructor in the division of Hematology-Oncology in Penn's Abramson Cancer Center. "We know that cancer patients and their doctors face decisions every day that stand to raise health care costs without conferring much benefit to patients, and our survey has identified some common themes in how these groups of stakeholders might propose to lower costs of care while still protecting patients."

More than 90 percent of all three groups surveyed attributed rising costs to drug companies charging too much, and more than 80 percent of each group cited insurance company profits as a driver of rising costs. Many also thought hospitals and doctors conducted unnecessary tests and provided unnecessary treatments (69 percent of patients, 81 percent of the general public, and 70 percent of doctors).

The research team, which includes senior author Ezekiel J. Emanuel, MD, PhD, chairman of the department of Medical Ethics and Health Policy, presented a variety of potential cost-lowering options to each group and asked whether they supported the idea. Cancer patients, members of the general public, and oncologists tended to be about as likely to say patients who can afford to pay more for care should be asked to pay more (56, 58, and 52 percent, respectively). And large numbers signed not paying for more expensive drugs when cheaper alternatives are equally as effective (78 percent of patients, 86 percent of the general public, and 90 percent of physicians). The majority also supported refusing to cover drugs that do not improve survival or quality of life, though physicians were more apt to refuse payment under those circumstances (79 percent compared to 52 percent of patients and 57 percent of the general public).

Even drugs that confer only incremental gains in survival, however, were found to be worth covering in the eyes of all groups surveyed: Just 12 percent of physicians were willing to refuse payment for a drug that extends life by four months, compared to 20 percent of patients and 28 percent of the general public.

Greater differences of opinion were observed around coverage for drugs offering benefits other than survival gains. When queried about a drug that doesn't extend life but reduces pain, for instance, only 5 percent of patients and 10 percent of the general public voiced support for refusing to cover the medication, compared to 32 percent of physicians. On coverage for a drug that doesn't extend life but adds convenience, 27 and 32 percent of patients and the general public, respectively, said those costs should not be covered, compared to 59 percent of physicians.

"These results suggest that patients and the lay public prioritize quality of life, while oncologists appear focused on controlling disease and increasing length of life," Gogineni says. "Patients have a much broader set of concerns, from the cost of their doctor's visits to the side effects of treatment and the emotional toll of their illness."

Sixty four percent of physicians said they supported the idea of an independent expert panel that would decide which therapies to cover, but that plan was met with resistance from patients (33 percent approved) and the general public (46 percent approved). The authors suggest this may be because physicians are more familiar with such models, which are already used for decision-making around scarce medical resources such as ICU beds and organs for transplantation. And, Gogineni notes, "distancing the locus of responsibility for access to high cost, low benefit cancer treatment may create less strain on the physician-patient relationship."

Article adapted by Medical News Today from original press release. Click 'references' tab above for source.
Visit our cancer / oncology section for the latest news on this subject. ASCO Annual Meeting: May 31-June 4, 2013 | McCormick Place | Chicago, Illinois
Gogineni will present the team's findings at ASCO on Sunday, June 2, 2013 in the Health Services Research poster session from 8 a.m. to noon in McCormick Place S405.
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Please use one of the following formats to quote this article in your essay, paper or report:

MLA

University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine. "Study Finds Broad Support For Rationing Of Some Types Of Cancer Care." Medical News Today. MediLexicon, Intl., May 18. 2013 Web.
May 20. 2013 APA

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' Study Finds Broad Support For Rationing Of Some Types Of Cancer Care'

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Contact Our News Editors

For any corrections of factual information, or to contact the editors please use our feedback form.

Please send any medical news or health news press releases to:

Note: Any medical information published on this website is not intended as a substitute for informed medical advice and you should not take any action before consulting with a health care professional. For more information, please read our terms and conditions.



View the original article here

Saturday, May 18, 2013

Social Support May Improve Breast Cancer Outcomes

Social well-being during the first year after a breast cancer diagnosis may have a beneficial effect on cancer outcomes. These results were published in the Journal of Clinical Oncology.

A diagnosis of breast cancer often affects a woman’s quality of life, but it’s been less clear whether quality of life affects breast cancer outcomes. Quality of life has physical, psychological, social, and material aspects, and any one these (or a combination) may affect health.?

To explore the relationship between post-diagnosis quality of life and breast cancer outcomes, researchers evaluated information from the Shanghai Breast Cancer Study. The study enrolled more than 2,000 women. Information about quality of life was collected six and 36 months after diagnosis.

Women were followed for close to five years after their initial quality-of-life assessment.???

Social well-being at six months after diagnosis was linked with both survival and risk of recurrence. Women with the highest level of social well-being had a 38% reduction in risk of death and a 48% reduction in risk of recurrence. The aspects of social well-being that appeared to provide the most benefit were marriage and family, social support, and interpersonal relationships.The other measures of quality of life (physical, psychological, and material) at six months after diagnosis did not significantly cancer outcomes, although there was a suggestion that psychological well-being may be important.By 36 months after diagnosis, none of the quality of life measures were strongly linked with cancer outcomes.

The researchers conclude “Social well-being in the first year after cancer diagnosis is a significant prognostic factor for breast cancer recurrence or mortality, suggesting a possible avenue of intervention by maintaining or enhancing social support for women soon after their breast cancer diagnosis to improve disease outcomes.”

Reference: Epplein M, Zheng Y, Zheng W et al. Quality of life after breast cancer diagnosis and survival. Journal of Clinical Oncology. Early online publication December 20, 2010.


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