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Stephanie Stiel

Researcher at Hannover Medical School

Publications -  127
Citations -  1406

Stephanie Stiel is an academic researcher from Hannover Medical School. The author has contributed to research in topics: Palliative care & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 17, co-authored 96 publications receiving 1007 citations. Previous affiliations of Stephanie Stiel include Hochschule Hannover & University of Erlangen-Nuremberg.

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A systematic review on the role of fish oil for the treatment of cachexia in advanced cancer: an EPCRC cachexia guidelines project.

TL;DR: There is not enough evidence to support a net benefit of n-3-FA in cachexia in advanced cancer, and the results from the review led to a weak negative GRADE recommendation.
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Validierung der neuen Fassung des Minimalen Dokumentationssystems (MIDOS2) für Patienten in der Palliativmedizin

TL;DR: In Deutschland, a test-retest-reliabilitat der Summenscores aller Probleme and Symptome aus MIDOS2 as mentioned in this paper was geringe Belastung, niedrigen Zeitaufwand und hohe Beteiligungsquoten zur taglichen Selbsteinschatzung von Problemen and SymPTomen empfohlen werden.
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Evaluation and comparison of two prognostic scores and the physicians' estimate of survival in terminally ill patients.

TL;DR: Estimating survival time from clinical experience seems to be easier for very bad or very good prognosis for physicians, and the estimates of the PPI and the PaP-S correlate highly, even higher correlations are found for the physicians’ prognosis and the scores.
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Trends in specialized palliative care for non-cancer patients in Germany--data from the national hospice and palliative care evaluation (HOPE).

TL;DR: Despite the continuously growing number of patients with non-malignant diseases, their number in PC services is still low and integrating PC ideas earlier into treatment of chronic diseases to improve quality of life of NCs during the final stages of their diseases will continue to challenge the health care system.
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Outcome assessment instruments in palliative and hospice care—a review of the literature

TL;DR: The wide scope of existing instruments makes consensus on a universal set of instruments for outcome assessment in palliative care improbable and a framework with a set of appropriate instruments could help to harmonize the variety of tools used in research and clinical practice.