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The Liverpool Care Pathway for the Dying Patient (LCP) was a care pathway in the United Kingdom (excluding Wales) covering palliative care options for patients in the final days or hours of life. It was developed to help doctors and nurses provide quality end-of-life care , to transfer quality end-of-life care from the hospice to hospital setting.
Liverpool Community Health NHS Trust was one of the community health trusts created in 2012 under the Transforming Community Services programme. It provided controversial services for people at the end of their life, Liverpool Care Pathway later nationally discredited and withdrawn. [1] Care was organised across 18 neighbourhood teams in the ...
In the United Kingdom, end-of-life care pathways are based on the Liverpool Care Pathway. Originally developed to provide evidence based care to dying cancer patients, this pathway has been adapted and used for a variety of chronic conditions at clinics in the UK and internationally. [45]
Liverpool Care Pathway for the Dying Patient, care guidance for dying hospital patients; Living cationic polymerization, a process in chemistry; Locking Compression Plate, an implant aiding the healing of a bone fracture; Long-chain polyunsaturated fatty acid; Longest Common Prefix array, in computer science
June 2007, Journalist and TV presenter Esther Rantzen visited the Norfolk and Norwich University Hospital to promote the use of the Liverpool Care of the Dying Pathway for terminal patients [36] July 2007, Actors Stephen Fry and Richard Briers took part in location filming for the second series of Kingdom ( ITV ) at the Norfolk and Norwich ...
The problem is that this audit was carried out by the Mary Curie Palliative Care Institute, which invented the Liverpool Care Pathway. I think this is a clear conflict of interests. MrSativa ( talk ) 06:03, 13 June 2017 (UTC) [ reply ]
A clinical pathway is a multidisciplinary management tool based on evidence-based practice for a specific group of patients with a predictable clinical course, in which the different tasks (interventions) by the professionals involved in the patient care are defined, optimized and sequenced either by hour (ED), day (acute care) or visit (homecare).
A living will made when competent, can, under UK law, give a directive that the person refuses "Palliative Care" or "Terminal Sedation", or "any drug likely to suppress my respiration." [34] The use of sedation for palliative care in the UK was considered as part of an independent review of the Liverpool Care Pathway for the Dying Patient.