SUNSET DANCE
"Loss and possession, death and life are one,
There falls no shadow where there shines no sun." - Hilaire Belloc
Doc Amrish Joshi stops by to say hi
BELLY BUTTON CHECK!
"Sherron you'll be releived to know
it looks as though your NOT Pregnant"
MEXICAN DRUG MIXING CARTEL MEETING
MAINLINES AKA SUB-Q
Management of Subcutaneous Infusions in Palliative between plastic butterfly needles and Teflon cannulae in subcutaneous infusion of drugs ...
COLOUR CODED
MylanHydromorphone 10mg/ml Sub-Q
Nozinane 25mg/ml Sub-Q
Dexamethasone 4mg/ml Sub-Q
OUT WITH THE OLD......
PILES & PILES of the OLD....
IN WITH THE NEW...SUB Q
THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW...ABOUT SENIORS ON DRUGS
Sep 16, 2008 - Uploaded by egallity
The Partnership for a Drug-Free America
presents its most famous commercial ever!
Antipsychotics prescribed to too many seniors
Seniors
get too many drugs, too little therapy: B.C. advocate - See more at:
http://www.timescolonist.com/news/local/seniors-get-too-many-drugs-too-little-therapy-b-c-advocate-1.1816098#sthash.aavmHH6G.dpuf
Seniors get too many drugs, too little therapy: B.C. advocate
Seniors
get too many drugs, too little therapy: B.C. advocate - See more at:
http://www.timescolonist.com/news/local/seniors-get-too-many-drugs-too-little-therapy-b-c-advocate-1.1816098#sthash.aavmHH6G.dpuf
Seniors and Prescription Drug Addiction
http://www.agingcare.com/Articles/Seniors-and-Prescription-Drug-Addiction-133459.htm
SPEEDING TICKET!
PINKY SPOTED GOING OVER 20kph...
Lamprocapnos spectabilis (bleeding heart or Sherraffairisoftheheartis
Pink Mezuzah with Traditional Shin
Expected/Planned Home End of Life Forms
The province of British Columbia developed the Joint Protocol For Expected/Planned Home Deaths in British Columbia (PDF, 635KB) to support individuals to die at home with their families or caregivers.
The Protocol provides guidance to
individuals at the end of their lives, families, and health care
providers on how to have an expected/planned natural home death. It
provides clarity to roles, responsibilities, and activities involved in a
home death. For more information on the Joint Protocol speak to your
community nurse, family physician or see How to Arrange for Care.
If you wish to plan an expected natural home death, please review the following forms and information:
- A No Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) form (PDF) is required to document an individual's wishes and a physician’s order to withhold CPR.
- A Notification of Expected Death in the Home form (PDF, 67KB) is completed by the patient’s physician and sent to the funeral home before the death. This form allows a Funeral Director to remove a body from a home without pronouncement of death. Pronouncement of death is not required by BC law, although it is widely recognized that pronouncement is sound clinical and ethical practice for nurses and physicians. There may be circumstances when pronouncement is difficult or families choose to waive pronouncement.
- If a person dies in British Columbia, the death must be registered with the Vital Statistics Agency. A Medical Certificate of Death form is completed by the physician within 48 hours after a death. The medical certificate of death is forwarded to the funeral director who will register the death. The funeral director can then issue a death certificate and burial permit.
- Additional Questions and Answers (PDF, 321KB) about expected/planned home deaths.
The Joint Protocol is the result of collaborative efforts of the
Ministry of Health, health authorities, BC Ambulance Service, the Office
of the Chief Coroner, BC Medical Association, BC College of Physicians
and Surgeons, BC Hospice Palliative Care Association, College of
Registered Nurses of BC, Funeral Service Association of BC, RCMP “E”
Division, (former) BC Health Association, BC Care Providers Association,
and BC Municipal Police Chiefs Association.
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