Intended for healthcare professionals

Editorials

Home delivery: chemotherapy and pizza?

BMJ 2001; 322 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.322.7290.809 (Published 07 April 2001) Cite this as: BMJ 2001;322:809

Evidence on safety and acceptability of home chemotherapy is growing

  1. A M Young, lead nurse,
  2. D J Kerr, professor of clinical oncology
  1. University Hospital Birmingham Trust and CRC Institute for Cancer Studies, University of Birmingham, Birmingham B15 2TT

    Paper p 826

    The past century has seen hospitals become the focus of the healthcare system despite attempts to shift the emphasis of care to the community. Most attempts to move complex and invasive procedures out of hospital completely and into patients' homes remain marginal. One example of this is home chemotherapy, the subject of a randomised trial in this week's issue (p 826).1

    Home chemotherapy is a service that provides a package of care to support the administration of chemotherapy to patients in their homes by specialist healthcare professionals (usually nurses). It may be distinguished from ambulatory chemotherapy, where patients visit the outpatient department to be connected to portable disposable pumps prefilled with cytotoxic drugs, which are then administered via a central venous catheter for 48 to 168 hours, and from day hospital chemotherapy, where patients visit the hospital daily to have their chemotherapy administered. …

    View Full Text

    Log in

    Log in through your institution

    Subscribe

    * For online subscription