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Joint position statement Indian Association of Palliative Care and Academy of Family Physicians of India – The way forward for developing community-based palliative care program throughout India: Policy, education, and service delivery considerations

PURPOSE: This joint position statement, by the Indian Association of Palliative Care (IAPC) and Academy of Family Physicians of India (AFPI), proposes to address gaps in palliative care provision in the country by developing a community-based palliative care model that will empower primary care phys...

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Autores principales: Jeba, Jenifer, Atreya, Shrikant, Chakraborty, Sulagna, Pease, Nikki, Thyle, Ann, Ganesh, Alka, Palat, Gayatri, Matthew, Lulu, Anbarasi, Sahaya, Kumar, Raman, Muckaden, Mary Ann, Barnard, Alan, Leng, Mhoira, Munday, Dan, Murray, Scott A
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6060921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30090767
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_99_18
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author Jeba, Jenifer
Atreya, Shrikant
Chakraborty, Sulagna
Pease, Nikki
Thyle, Ann
Ganesh, Alka
Palat, Gayatri
Matthew, Lulu
Anbarasi, Sahaya
Kumar, Raman
Muckaden, Mary Ann
Barnard, Alan
Leng, Mhoira
Munday, Dan
Murray, Scott A
author_facet Jeba, Jenifer
Atreya, Shrikant
Chakraborty, Sulagna
Pease, Nikki
Thyle, Ann
Ganesh, Alka
Palat, Gayatri
Matthew, Lulu
Anbarasi, Sahaya
Kumar, Raman
Muckaden, Mary Ann
Barnard, Alan
Leng, Mhoira
Munday, Dan
Murray, Scott A
author_sort Jeba, Jenifer
collection PubMed
description PURPOSE: This joint position statement, by the Indian Association of Palliative Care (IAPC) and Academy of Family Physicians of India (AFPI), proposes to address gaps in palliative care provision in the country by developing a community-based palliative care model that will empower primary care physicians to provide basic palliative care. EVIDENCE: India ranks very poorly, 67th of 80 countries in the quality of death index. Two-thirds of patients who die need palliative care and many such patients spend the last hours of life in the Intensive care unit. The Indian National Health Policy (NHP) 2017 and other international bodies endorse palliative care as an essential health-care service component. NHP 2017 also recommends development of distance and continuing education options for general practitioners to upgrade their skills to provide timely interventions and avoid unnecessary referrals. METHODS: A taskforce was formed with Indian and International expertise in palliative care and family medicine to develop this paper including an open conference at the IAPC conference 2017, agreement of a formal liaison between IAPC and AFPI and wide consultation leading to the development of this position paper aimed at supporting integration, networking, and joint working between palliative care specialists and generalists. The WHO model of taking a public health approach to palliative care was used as a framework for potential developments; policy support, education and training, service development, and availability of appropriate medicines. RECOMMENDATIONS: This taskforce recommends the following (1) Palliative care should be integrated into all levels of care including primary care with clear referral pathways, networking between palliative care specialist centers and family medicine physicians and generalists in community settings, to support education and clinical services. (2) Implement the recommendations of NHP 2017 to develop services and training programs for upskilling of primary care doctors in public and private sector. (3) Include palliative care as a mandatory component in the undergraduate (MBBS) and postgraduate curriculum of family physicians. (4) Improve access to necessary medications in urban and rural areas. (5) Provide relevant in-service training and support for palliative care to all levels of service providers including primary care and community staff. (6) Generate public awareness about palliative care and empower the community to identify those with chronic disease and provide support for those choosing to die at home.
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spelling pubmed-60609212018-08-08 Joint position statement Indian Association of Palliative Care and Academy of Family Physicians of India – The way forward for developing community-based palliative care program throughout India: Policy, education, and service delivery considerations Jeba, Jenifer Atreya, Shrikant Chakraborty, Sulagna Pease, Nikki Thyle, Ann Ganesh, Alka Palat, Gayatri Matthew, Lulu Anbarasi, Sahaya Kumar, Raman Muckaden, Mary Ann Barnard, Alan Leng, Mhoira Munday, Dan Murray, Scott A J Family Med Prim Care Invited Article PURPOSE: This joint position statement, by the Indian Association of Palliative Care (IAPC) and Academy of Family Physicians of India (AFPI), proposes to address gaps in palliative care provision in the country by developing a community-based palliative care model that will empower primary care physicians to provide basic palliative care. EVIDENCE: India ranks very poorly, 67th of 80 countries in the quality of death index. Two-thirds of patients who die need palliative care and many such patients spend the last hours of life in the Intensive care unit. The Indian National Health Policy (NHP) 2017 and other international bodies endorse palliative care as an essential health-care service component. NHP 2017 also recommends development of distance and continuing education options for general practitioners to upgrade their skills to provide timely interventions and avoid unnecessary referrals. METHODS: A taskforce was formed with Indian and International expertise in palliative care and family medicine to develop this paper including an open conference at the IAPC conference 2017, agreement of a formal liaison between IAPC and AFPI and wide consultation leading to the development of this position paper aimed at supporting integration, networking, and joint working between palliative care specialists and generalists. The WHO model of taking a public health approach to palliative care was used as a framework for potential developments; policy support, education and training, service development, and availability of appropriate medicines. RECOMMENDATIONS: This taskforce recommends the following (1) Palliative care should be integrated into all levels of care including primary care with clear referral pathways, networking between palliative care specialist centers and family medicine physicians and generalists in community settings, to support education and clinical services. (2) Implement the recommendations of NHP 2017 to develop services and training programs for upskilling of primary care doctors in public and private sector. (3) Include palliative care as a mandatory component in the undergraduate (MBBS) and postgraduate curriculum of family physicians. (4) Improve access to necessary medications in urban and rural areas. (5) Provide relevant in-service training and support for palliative care to all levels of service providers including primary care and community staff. (6) Generate public awareness about palliative care and empower the community to identify those with chronic disease and provide support for those choosing to die at home. Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd 2018 /pmc/articles/PMC6060921/ /pubmed/30090767 http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_99_18 Text en Copyright: © 2018 Journal of Family Medicine and Primary Care http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/4.0 This is an open access journal, and articles are distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 License, which allows others to remix, tweak, and build upon the work non-commercially, as long as appropriate credit is given and the new creations are licensed under the identical terms.
spellingShingle Invited Article
Jeba, Jenifer
Atreya, Shrikant
Chakraborty, Sulagna
Pease, Nikki
Thyle, Ann
Ganesh, Alka
Palat, Gayatri
Matthew, Lulu
Anbarasi, Sahaya
Kumar, Raman
Muckaden, Mary Ann
Barnard, Alan
Leng, Mhoira
Munday, Dan
Murray, Scott A
Joint position statement Indian Association of Palliative Care and Academy of Family Physicians of India – The way forward for developing community-based palliative care program throughout India: Policy, education, and service delivery considerations
title Joint position statement Indian Association of Palliative Care and Academy of Family Physicians of India – The way forward for developing community-based palliative care program throughout India: Policy, education, and service delivery considerations
title_full Joint position statement Indian Association of Palliative Care and Academy of Family Physicians of India – The way forward for developing community-based palliative care program throughout India: Policy, education, and service delivery considerations
title_fullStr Joint position statement Indian Association of Palliative Care and Academy of Family Physicians of India – The way forward for developing community-based palliative care program throughout India: Policy, education, and service delivery considerations
title_full_unstemmed Joint position statement Indian Association of Palliative Care and Academy of Family Physicians of India – The way forward for developing community-based palliative care program throughout India: Policy, education, and service delivery considerations
title_short Joint position statement Indian Association of Palliative Care and Academy of Family Physicians of India – The way forward for developing community-based palliative care program throughout India: Policy, education, and service delivery considerations
title_sort joint position statement indian association of palliative care and academy of family physicians of india – the way forward for developing community-based palliative care program throughout india: policy, education, and service delivery considerations
topic Invited Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6060921/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30090767
http://dx.doi.org/10.4103/jfmpc.jfmpc_99_18
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