Transcript
Page 1: 12 th  September 2006

Dr N Dinat, Z Sithole, J Marston, Dr A Barnard, L Penn-Kekana

Presentation to the Parliamentary Portfolio Committee by Hospice and Palliative care Association of South Africa,Wits Palliative Care and the

Palliative Care Society of South Africa

12th September 2006

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Who we are

PCSSA Palliative care Society of

South Africa

University of the Witwatersrand

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Translating policy into action

• Palliative care is part of South African Health policy The Patients' Rights

CharterAccess to healthcarev. palliative care that is affordable

and effective in cases of incurable or terminal illness;

GOVERNMENT’S COMPREHENSIVE HIV AND AIDS CARE, TREATMENT AND MANAGEMENT PLAN

Strategic Plan 2006/7-2008/9 – Health Department

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Why are we here

• Government has recognized that pain and symptom relief is a human/patient’s right

• Traditionally palliative care has been provided by NGOs and FBO

• Access to pain and symptom relief remains a problem to many South Africans

• Need to work to strengthen palliative care in the public sector and partnerships

• An oversight hearing will raise profile, identify gaps, explore challenges of implementing government policy and support development of new services

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Many illnesses are accompanied by huge pain and suffering

• Gauteng suffered 95 186 deaths in 2002 (Stats SA)

– 38% from AIDS and cancers– Significant number from other chronic illnesses

• Almost all would have attempted access to a hospital several times – Inpatient mortality about 20%

• Nurses and doctors are traumatized since they do not know what to do

But much of pain and suffering with AIDS and cancers could be alleviated using simple approach

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WHO expert cmmtee on cancer pain and active supportive care 1996

• In most parts of the world, the majority of cancer patients present with advanced disease. For them the only realistic treatment option is pain relief and palliative care”

• Freedom from pain should be seen as a right on every cancer patient and access to pain therapy a measure of respect for this right

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Sr Zodwa Sithole

A primary health care nurse and a palliative care nurse-clinician from

Kwa-Zulu Natal

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palliative drugs

• All on the essential medicines list

• In SA 8 drugs (all on the EDL) can do this

(cancers and AIDS)– In the UK 4 drugs shown to ameliorate most

pains and symptoms

• Nurse-clinician prescribing

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What is Palliative Care?• When the doctors say

there is nothing more that can be done

• ‘caring for those we cannot cure’

• Adds life to days, not days to life

• Provides pain relief and symptom alleviation from diagnosis until death

• Provides bereavement support

PHYSICAL EMOTIONAL

SOCIAL SPIRITUAL

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What palliative care is not

• Synonymous with home-based care

• Care without drugs or health care workers

• Terminal care provided only by hospices

• A luxury for the rich, that is unaffordable

• A vertical programme• A “nice to have”• Step-down care

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Why we cannot afford not to have palliative care

• Children and the elderly are left unsupported to care for dying family in pain

• Health care workers and home based carers are traumatised by watching on helplessly

• Lack of palliative care increases the feminisation of poverty

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Why We Can Afford To Provide Palliative Care In The Public Sector

• Direct costs– Less than a hospital

• R1600 vs R300

– BUT rational visits with strict referral criteria

– Nurse-clinicians utilized effectively diagnosis, treatment, and referral

• Savings– Save multiple

unnecessary admissions into tertiary centres

– Will make HBC programmes more effective

– Integration will reduce duplication in management

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Palliative care effectively mitigates suffering

• Studies have shown a gap in access to effective pain and symptom relief

• Barriers include lack of knowledge and misconceptions, cumbersome regulations of some drugs, not ‘mainstream’ medicine

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Challenges in providing palliative care in South Africa

• The Public and the providers’ knowledge about palliative care– Myths about morphine and pain relief in

cancer and other life-threatening illnesses– Misconception that palliative care is about

euthanasia

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Enhances Home Based Care Programmes

• Policy states palliative care should be available

• This model does not replace HBC but supports them– HBC needs palliative services to do their work

more effectively. – Our Palliative services are enhanced by

working with HBC groups in the Soweto Care Givers Network, and region 6 & 10 meetings

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Palliative care supports patients and their families

• Relief from pain and alleviation of suffering is a basic human right

• Palliative care is affordable, do-able

• Allows people to live until they die and to die in dignity

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WHO ModelEducation

Of the public

Of health care professionals (doctors, nurses, pharmacists)

Of others (health care policy-makers, administrators, drug regulators

National or state policy emphasising the need to alleviatechronic cancer pain

Government Policy

Drug availability

Changes in health care regulations/ legislation to improve drug availability (especially of opioids)

Improvements in prescribing, distributing, dispensing and administration of drugs

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An interview with a family member who received palliative

care

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Palliative care services at the Chris Hani Baragwanath Hospital

SowetoDr Natalya Dinat

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Equity – by public sector provision

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Mr Martin passed on 5 days after this visit

• Our patient for 5 months. We helped with breathlessness; choking feeling; pains which needed morphine; fits; incontinence; family issues and feeding; ensuring that the family were able to cope at home, so preventing more admissions to CHB, and probable death at CHB

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Collaboration with the DoSD

• Palliative team work with DoSD to distribute food parcels to patients who require it

• Do the ‘means test”• Provide distribution

points• Keep records

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Palliative care and children

Joan Marston from St Nicholas Childrens’ Hospice, Bloemfontein

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A vision for palliative care

• Quality palliative care will be accessible to everybody

• Less suffering using local innovations, EDL, community partnerships

• All HCW will confidently use a palliative approach

• Multidisciplinary palliative team in each DHS • Patient’s rights realised• Patients’ and their families’ suffering mitigated

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Contact us

Loveday Penn KekanaEmail: [email protected] Natalya DinatTel: 011 933 4031Fax: 011 933 3482Email: [email protected] SitholeEmail: [email protected]


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