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Part I. Communication Throughout Palliative Care
Crucial Importance Of The Dialogue
Certain news is indelible
The importance of silence
Informed Consent: Ethical And Practical Peculiarities
Understanding The Phase Of Grief To Speak Properly To The Patient
Phases or stages of grief
The pathological or unresolved grief
When should I ask for help?
What are postponed griefs?
It Is Difficult To Use The Word Death
Dealing with death and babies
Piaget's Theory: How Children Change Their Mode To Understand Throughout Their Growth
How The Piaget Models Are Applied To The Dialogue With The Children About Death
Special children
Obstacles To Communication
Desire to protect the child from distress
Parents' emotional well-being
Factors that influence the communication of health professionals
Learning To Communicate According To The Patient's Character And Mood
Bringing Your Patients Mentally Close: The Briggs Indicator
Part II. Ethics And Palliative Care
What Is "Ethical"
Not principles but virtues
The drama of imitation and of being mere copies of the human
The conditions for ethics: Reason, Realism, Empathy
Does The Child Have Ethical Responsibilities?
The role of coherence and imitation
Children are not small adults
Suicide
Children are not allowed to choose something against their health
Parents Cannot Choose But Childrens Health And Wellbeing
The Words Of Health Show That Healthcare Is Alliance And Not Mere Procedures
Origin of the words medicine health care
What Is Health
Health is socially helped satisfaction
Health is possible even for the sick
Health and loneliness are false friends
Pain and environment limit real health
Part III. Perinatal Care
Treating As Human Those Who Do Not Seem Human: The Philosophical Dilemma
Fetal Palliative Care
Newborns: To Heal Them All, And At Any Price?
Criteria
The probabilistic criterion
Best interest principle
The least harm criterion
The least pain criterion
Measuring Pain And Stress
Scales
Other tools to measure pain
Part IV. Therapies
Analgesic Therapies
Drugs
Adjuvant analgesics
Non-pharmacological therapies
Distraction: Physiological Basis
Sedation
Drugs
Scales
Self-sedation
Refractory symptoms
Sedation is not always necessary
Opioids In Pediatrics
Main opioids used in pediatrics
Recommendations
Most common objections
Opioid withdrawal
When to start or continue opioids for chronic pain
Selection, dosage, duration, monitoring and suspension of opioids
Special Needs
Part V. Landmarks For A Holistic-Evolutive Approach
The Three Paradoxes Of Caring For Terminal Children
The baby scares us
Paradox of the contemporary flowering and death
Paradox of inverted reason
Paradox of the spectator's shadow (Platos myth)
Wrong Cases Of Pediatric Palliative Care
Use of a smoky principle
Therapeutic obstinacy
Contagious Pain
Caregivers burnout
The pain of the parents
A vicious circle.

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