Caregivers to cancer patients may be particularly vulnerable to the experience of loneliness. The current study compared
the strategies used to cope with loneliness by those caring for hospitalized cancer patients who were receiving treatment,
and caregivers of cancer patients in a hospice, who were on their death bed. Analyses revealed that there was no significant
difference in coping with loneliness by caregivers of the ill and dying, but found a significant interaction effect within the
caregivers to the ill group. Women attending to the ill scored higher on Acceptance and reflection, Self-development &
understanding, and on the Social support network subscales than men did.
Key words
Caregivers, Loneliness, Cancer, Patients, Death
Feasibility study of a systematic approach for discontinuation of multiple medications in older adults: addressing polypharmacy
Background: Polypharmacy and inappropriate medication use is a problem in elderly patients, who are more likely to experience adverse effects from multiple treatments and less

