Maria Cigolini is a palliative medicine physician with a background in general medicine and an Associate Professor of Medicine at the University of Sydney (UniSyd), Australia. She has co-authored and created a wide range of policies, programs, and consensus guidelines in supportive and palliative care.
From 2010 to 2022 she was Clinical Director of the Palliative Care Department at Royal Prince Alfred Hospital (RPAH) in Sydney, responsible for the clinical expansion of the department to its current size, along with the management and administration, research and quality assurance projects within the department, and its associated community and regional outreach services. During her time as clinical head, she achieved training accreditation of all current Royal Australasian College of Physician Palliative Medicine Advance Training positions within RPAH consultative and community services and regional outreach, and for the Sydney Local Health District’s dual-training Renal Supportive Care Service position, for a service she co-designed.
In addition to lecturing and clinical and project supervision of advanced trainees and UniSyd medical students, she has supervised University of Tasmania Health Administration Masters’ students furthering the development of supportive care services, Examples of Professor Cigolini’s contributions to consensus guidelines in supportive and palliative care include:
the Agency for Clinical Innovation Policy’s Clinical Practice Guide for Deactivation of Implantable Cardioverter Defibrillators at End of Life,
her health district’s Advance Care Planning module, also available to primary health care networks within Sydney, and
the Australian Government Department of Home Affairs policy for Advance Care Planning for Immigration Detainees.
She also contributes to the Australian Remote Vocational Training Network’s annual workshops in advance care planning and remote provision of palliative care.
Professor Cigolini’s international involvement includes being a member of the governing council of the International Association of Catholic Bioethicists contributing to colloquia on policy application toward person-centered care and public health matters. She is also an associate member of the World Medical Association, where she has contributed to working groups discussing the impacts of euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide and professional/conscientious objection to the International Code of Medical Ethics and The Venice Declaration of End-of Life-Care, for which she represented the IAHPC.
Professor Cigolini is a lifetime member of the IAHPC.
She enjoys music, reading, and walking, dinners with family and friends, and time spent with her children and their families. She hopes for a world in which all life is respected and cared for, toward a common good.
This Holiday Season
Help us to help others: IAHPC's annual fundraiser!
How your gift supports the IAHPC mission
Achieved: $24,941
Goal: $30,000
83%
Education
Your gift funds the operational costs of our online courses taught by globally recognized experts who volunteer their time and provide educational resources relevant to palliative care topics. It also supports scholarships that enable palliative care workers to attend educational events and congresses, and allows us to maintain Pallipedia, the free, live, online dictionary.
The goal of this pillar is to implement strategies, resources and tools that will improve the competencies of the global workforce for appropriate palliative care delivery. We have two programs under this pillar plus many other resources for our members.
Your gift enables us to build and strengthen the partnerships that accelerate global, regional, and national advocacy for palliative care. We advocate for its integration into primary health care under universal health coverage and effective access to essential palliative care medicines and packages for people of all ages. Your gift supports our work to prepare delegates and participate in technical consultation meetings of the relevant UN organizations.
The goal this pillar is the integration of palliative care into primary health care within the spectrum of universal coverage to improve access to adequate care for patients in need. We offer the following to our members:
Documents on Human Rights and Access to Medicines and Care
Research
Your gift enables us to continue doing research that provides guidance and recommendations for action, based on responses from the global palliative care community. Such research includes our recent evaluation of the impact of euthanasia and assisted dying practices on palliative care workers and the use of essential medicines for palliative care. It also supports the costs of publications focused on research relevant to palliative care.
The goal of this pillar is to design and implement projects that lead to the integration of palliative care into health policies, resolutions, and key documents. Our studies help us provide guidance and recommendations, and take action based on the responses from the global palliative care community.
Your membership enables you to participate in IAHPC projects such as the:
Your gift enables us to continue our in-depth reporting and book reviews in Pallinews, as well as media campaigns that raise awareness about the need to increase access to care and support for patients and families.
We are a small organization that allocates over 80% of our budget to mission driven programs and to the maintenance of our free website. We need operational funding to continue the work.
Give a gift, get a gift
IAHPC members: When you gift a 2-year membership to a colleague in a low- or middle-income country, we extend your membership by 6 months.