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palliation
[ pal-ee-ey-shuhn ]
noun
- the act or process of relieving a patient’s suffering without curing the disease that is causing it:
The Academy provides authoritative, evidence-based advice to support policy for the prevention, management, and palliation of cancer.
- the act of mitigating or concealing the gravity of an offense by excuses, apologies, etc.:
No matter how events are viewed, there is no palliation for such crimes as the recent massacre of an entire family.
Other Words From
- non·pal·li·a·tion noun
Word History and Origins
Origin of palliation1
Example Sentences
It also highlights an "inappropriate" decision to offer a patient an "unnecessary and futile" amputation when "palliation and conservative therapy should have been considered instead".
Marcus’s father was offered hospice care, a form of palliation that is generally reserved for people with a life expectancy of six months or less, who are no longer pursuing “curative” treatments.
Bunting himself looked down on annotations: “Notes are a confession of failure, not a palliation of it,” he wrote, introducing the few notes to his 1968 “Collected Poems.”
For them, a shift in that goal, toward palliation, occurs only when the leukemia has proven to be dogged in its resistance to our assaults.
This recognition allows patients to halt toxic treatment, opt for effective palliation and articulate their goals for the end of life.
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