Publication date
2008Author
Middleton-Green, LauraPeer-Reviewed
YesOpen Access status
closedAccess
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Fatigue is a complex symptom commonly experienced by people with life-limiting illnesses. It has been identified in patients with, for example, cancer, heart failure, respiratory conditions, acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and renal failure. It is often rated by patients as having a greater effect on quality of life than pain. This article will explore the manifestations and consequences of fatigue. It will propose a minimum standard for its assessment and management and describe the implementation and evaluation of an audit, conducted in a hospice environment, designed to evaluate achievement of this standard. Although this audit was carried out in a hospice setting, the aim of the article is also to raise awareness of fatigue in all healthcare settings and to improve the assessment of this debilitating symptom.Version
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Middleton-Green L (2008) Assessment and management of fatigue in life-limiting illness. Journal of End of Life Care. 2(1).Middleton-Green L (2008) Assessment and management of fatigue in life-limiting illness. Journal of End of Life Care. 2(1).