Substance Use, End-of-Life Care and Multiple Deprivation

Substance Use, End-of-Life Care and Multiple Deprivation

Practice and Research

Wright, Sam; Yarwood, Gemma A.; Witham, Gary; Galvani, Sarah

Taylor & Francis Ltd

05/2024

196

Mole

9781032372921

Pré-lançamento - envio 15 a 20 dias após a sua edição

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1.Introduction. Part I: Different voices (Introduction by Gary Witham). 2.Death is not an abstract now: approaching end of life as someone using substances. 3.Views from the coalface: social and health care professionals working with people using substances at, or near, the end of their lives. 4.Seeing the common ground: family and practitioner caregivers' perspectives of palliative care for people using substances. Part II: Health inequalities (Introduction by Sam Wright). 5.Health literacy and substance use within palliative and end-of-life care. 6.Learning disabilities and substance use at the end of life: listening to the unheard. 7.Improving end-of-life care for people with co-existing mental health and substance use. 8.Ageing (dis)gracefully: People who inject drugs living with hepatitis C and the provision of end-of-life care. Part III: Social inequalities (Introduction by Sarah Galvani). 9.Homelessness and substance use within palliative and end-of-life care. 10 - Jane's journey: substance use, palliative care and sex work. 11.Reflecting on the challenges and inequalities facing Black and minoritized communities in accessing substance use services, palliative and end-of-life care. 12.Unequal in life and death: substance use, disadvantage and end-of-life care in prison. 13.Reflections and recommendations: multiple disadvantage, substance use and end-of-life care.
Palliative Care;Chronic;ACP;Social Care Practitioners;Health Literacy;COPD;Person's Care;Bi-polar Disorder;Limited Health Literacy;Minoritised Communities;USA;Gateway;Social Care Professionals;Illicit Opioids;End Stage Liver Disease;Ageing Cohort;Opiate Agonist Treatment;Support Health Literacy;Alcoholic Liver Disease;Informal Carers;Dual Diagnoses;Alcohol Related Liver Disease;Health Inequalities;Palliative Care Sectors;Alcohol Services