Palliative care is treatment of serious health-related suffering (SHS). It includes management of pain and other symptoms and addresses psychological, social and spiritual suffering of patients and their families. Like in most low or middle-income countries, the need for palliative care is greater in India than in the west simply because disease-specific treatment does not reach patients adequately or early enough. Palliative Care also aims to reduce over all health-related suffering for patients and families living with life limiting or life threatening conditions which includes the usual gamut of cancer and HIV, but also strokes, congenital anomalies, debilitating and progressive neurological conditions, substance abuse and spinal cord traumas too. Palliative Care is not restricted to those at the End of Life. However, Palliative Care encourages conversations about the end of life. Palliative Care advocates for “a good death” which is pain-free and hopefully surrounded by loved ones, friends and family. One need not wait till after all curative options are over to seek out Palliative Care. It is in fact recommended that Palliative Care be initiated at the time of diagnosis. Seeking Palliative Care is not a death sentence. WHO Definition of Palliative Care Myths & Facts about Palliative Care Why is Palliative Care relevant? Like in most low-income or lower middle-income countries, the need for palliative care is greater in India than in the west simply because disease-specific treatment does not reach patients adequately or early enough. We follow the same definition of palliative care as outlined by the WHO. But in our context, the phrase “life-threatening” is to be used keeping in mind life in the broader sense of the term and not just existence. This means that we include many “life-limiting” diseases like paraplegia that we believe threaten life by limiting it to within 4 walls. In the West, there is a parallel care system that takes care of people with such conditions, and provides physical, social, mental and spiritual support in the home setting; we do not have such a system. We bring them into the fold of Palliative Care. 1 in 5 suicides in India are committed by a person living with an advanced, chronic or life-limiting condition. In 2017, a Lancet Commission report recommended that palliative care should focus on all aspects of serious health-related suffering. Current Scenario in India
- Less than 2% of India’s 1.2 billion people have access to Palliative care.
- 1 in 5 suicides in India are committed by a person living with an advanced, chronic or life-limiting condition.
- Due to lack of basic social security the financial devastation of the family is far greater at the time of illness.
- While the lower income groups suffer greatly due to the above reason, paradoxically the affluent in our country are also marginalised, due to the absence of Palliative Care in healthcare institutions especially in the private sector.
- There are thousands of people who cannot access a health care facility because they are bed-bound or are elderly and living alone with no one to accompany them.
- An India population study in 2014 showed that in Kerala alone, around 1,70,000 people above the age of 60 live alone in single person households. Of these nearly 1,43,000 are women. There are socially and culturally marginalised groups – women, children, the LGBTQI community, people with mental health conditions, migrant populations, prisoners, geographically isolated groups. The list is a pretty long one.
Curriculum
- 7 Sections
- 41 Lessons
- 50 Weeks
- Integrated Basic and Advanced Course in Palliative Medicine1
- 1. Introduction to Palliative Care1
- 2. Pain Management15
- 3.1Comprehensive Pain Assessment
- 3.2Matching the Drug Class to the Pain
- 3.3Patient Factors that Influence Prescribing Decisions
- 3.4Pain Management – Assessing Risk for Opioid Substance Use Disorder
- 3.5Pain Management- Opioid Trials, Determining Design, Efficacy, and Safety
- 3.6Medical Ethics
- 3.7Prescribing an Opioid
- 3.8Prescribing Short-Acting Opioids: Four Case Studies
- 3.9Monitoring for Opioid Efficacy, Side Effects, and Substance Use Disorder
- 3.10Converting from Short-Acting to Long-Acting Opioids
- 3.11Prescribing Practice and Opioid Conversions
- 3.12Advanced Conversions and Opioid Side Effects
- 3.13Special Populations And Patient-Controlled Analgesia
- 3.14Managing Pain in Patients At Risk for Substance Use Disorder
- 3.15Pain Management & Putting it all together
- 3. Symptom management9
- 4.1Anxiety in Patients with Serious Illness
- 4.2Depression in Patients with Serious Illness
- 4.3Delirium
- 4.4Constipation
- 4.5Nausea and Vomiting in Patients with Serious Illness
- 4.6Palliative care emergency
- 4.7Opioid availability
- 4.8Organizing Palliative care services
- 4.9Dyspnea in Patients with Serious Illness
- 4. Communication skills7
- 5. Best practice in Dementia Care8
- 6.1Discussing your Patient & Dementia Diagnosis
- 6.2Communicating About What to Expect as Dementia Progresses
- 6.3Planning for the Future with People Living with Dementia and their Caregivers
- 6.4Supporting the Caregivers of People Living with Dementia
- 6.5Understanding and Responding to Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia
- 6.6Mood and Sleep Disturbances in People Living with Dementia
- 6.7Critical decisions in advanced dementia
- 6.8End of life care:
- EPC-I Module Post-Test Survey2
2 thoughts on “Integrated Basic and Advanced Course in Palliative Medicine”
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I m interested in the coarse
Is there a place where the marks we scored can be seen?