Advocacy Program

Katherine Pettus

The IAHPC Advocacy Program aligns with the four thematic areas of work identified in the IAHPC 2020-2024 Strategic Plan, Strategic Objective 1.2: “To develop a global cadre of IAHPC members to advocate for improved access to palliative care at national, regional, and global levels.” The Advocacy Program supports national and regional palliative care (PC) organizations to operationalize policy agendas that include integration of PC into primary health care under universal health coverage and improved availability of essential palliative care medicines. As a Non-State Actor in official relations with the World Health Organization, and a non-governmental organization in consultative status with the UN Economic and Social Council, our delegations participate in technical consultations and member state meetings of the UN organizations relevant to global health, drug policy, and human rights.

The IAHPC has developed and implemented a list of resources, tools and strategies to strengthen advocacy for palliative care. The program is under the leadership of Dr. Katherine Pettus, Senior Advocacy and Partnerships Director.

Advocacy Initiatives

The IAHPC Advocacy and Partnerships Senior Director and IAHPC members have participated as delegates and representatives in several meetings of UN organizations and civil society organizations. This section includes links to presentations and reports.

Leadership Development Program (LEAD)

The IAHPC Leadership Development (LEAD) Program is designed to support academic institutions and civil society organizations aspiring to build leadership capacity to develop constructive partnerships and improve palliative care service provision in their countries or regions.

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Advocacy for global, regional, and national advocacy for palliative care Course

The goal of the IAHPC advocacy course is to continue building and strengthening partnerships to accelerate global, regional, and national advocacy for palliative care.

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Palliative Care Advocacy: Why Does It Matter?

This piece summarizes the content of the basic advocacy course released for IAHPC members, defines palliative care and advocacy, distinguishes advocacy from lobbying, discusses how an international organization such as the IAHPC advocates for palliative care at the global level, and clarifies the vital feedback loop between advocacy and clinical practice.

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What are the relevant International Conventions and Treaties and why are they important?

The goal of the IAHPC advocacy course is to continue building and strengthening partnerships to accelerate global, regional, and national advocacy for palliative care.

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FAQs on Palliative Care Advocacy

Structured communication between national, regional, and global palliative care associations (non-governmental organizations) and government representatives, at the local, national, regional, and international levels.

To improve policies leading to access to palliative care, and to raise public awareness of the benefits of appropriate care for patients and families.

Members of a palliative care organization, non-governmental organizations, civil society organizations, and professional associations or institutions. IAHPC advocacy is done by individuals and teams in an institutional context that is framed by the United Nations system. National advocacy is done in the context of your own government.

It depends on the issue and on what level you want to work: local, regional, national, international, or a combination. Advocacy is done by individuals, but through institutions/organizations. Some examples of how you can do advocacy include:

  1. Join your national, regional, and international palliative care organizations.
  2. Stay current by reading the IAHPC newsletter.
  3. Get to know your lawmakers and regulators). Invite them to visit your program and see your work firsthand. Build constructive, collaborative relationships with your government. They need experts to guide and advise and palliative care workers can provide guidance.
  4. Participate in social media (create accounts on social media such as Twitter, Facebook, LinkedIn, YouTube and others.) Follow the IAHPC on social media and stay current.
  5. Ensure your association designates an advocacy focal point to engage in direct communication: letters, emails, etc. with lawmakers, and with regional and international palliative care organizations.
  6. Get to know journalists and representatives of traditional media: learn to write press releases, editorials, and co-author journal articles.
  7. Participate in a delegation with your national, regional, or international association in meetings where public health issues are debated and policy goals are set out in resolutions and consensus documents.

We can help you with these efforts!