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Palliative Care: How can we make a difference? Annual Conference 2009. How can we make a difference to children and young people with palliative care needs?. Andrea Cail Director of Service Development CHAS. The breadth and depth of palliative care for children. Chronic conditions
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Palliative Care:How can we make a difference?Annual Conference 2009
How can we make a difference to children and young people with palliative care needs? Andrea Cail Director of Service Development CHAS
The breadth and depth of palliative care for children • Chronic conditions • Progressive incurable conditions • Life-threatening illness • Non progressive conditions ACT /RCPCH 2009 Guide to developing Children’s palliative care services
Palliative / treatment relationships ACT / RCPCH 2009 (revised) • As the illness progresses the emphasis gradually shifts from curative to palliative treatment • Highly technical invasive treatments may be used both to prolong life and improve quality alongside palliative care, each becoming dominant at different stages of the disease • No cure is possible and care is palliative from the time of diagnosis • At first it is not apparent that this will be a terminal illness and palliative care starts suddenly once that realisation dawns Curative Palliative
This means • Cancer remains the second largest cause of death in the 1yr – 19yr age group • Deaths due to diseases of the - nervous system, - congenital anomalies - respiratory system almost double the percentage of deaths from cancer • Increasing numbers of children and young people living with significant chronic illness and disability Waterson, T, Helms, PJ, Ward Platt, M (2006) Paediatrics: A core text on child health.
Challenges • the focus in paediatrics is still on curing disease (Hutchinson et al 2003) • aggressive treatment provided in tertiary paediatric centres is at odds with the philosophy of palliative care(Feundnter et al 2001) • ‘End of life decisions represent complex ethical and moral dilemma’s that are likely to increase with advances in medical technology’ (Samanta and Samanta 2006)
Underlying Principles • Child and Family first • Developing sustainable services • Equity of access and quality • Improving quality / outcomes • Workforce planning
How are we makinga difference? • Investment in managed clinical networks and specialist posts • Identifying training and education needs • Collaboration across the UK • Research / evaluation • Short Life Working Group – Young People
Care pathway approach ACT 2004 Access to services according to different stages in condition A keyworker will be responsible for ensuring joined up provision
Agreed standards with outcome measures • Breaking news • Planning for going home • Multi-agency assessment of needs • Multi-agency care plan • End of Life plan ACT 2009 A Family Companion
Ongoing challenges • Data – registers • Care at the end of life • Transition • Working with children, young people and parents
Care at the end of life • Understand what families want • Reduce the number of children dying in hospital? • Improve support at home – care pathway • Research / studies • Bereavement support
How can we make a difference? • ‘When I’m at home I go to bed at 10pm….my disability restricts me ‘cos I’m not able to put myself to bed and get up…there are less restrictions at the airport!’ • ‘In this world, I’ll never forget that – seeing him do what I thought was not possible’ • ‘when you are out in the world you feel like a Martian – no one understands what it feels like to be a bereaved parent, at RH we are all Martians together’
Palliative Care:How can we make a difference?Annual Conference 2009