First, this issue marks the 22nd Anniversary of the IAHPC Newsletter!!
We are very proud of our Newsletter, but most of all we appreciate the work of those who have contributed for so many years to the content and made possible our monthly publication.
The Newsletter has proven to be a wonderful tool to disseminate a broad range of information and increase awareness about hospice and palliative care around the world, and has served as a tool for many of you to learn about new developments, events, and also to bring attention to your own programs, the challenges that many of you face, and the progress that thousands have been able to achieve.
We also thank the many contributors and board members who have supplied us with outstanding content each month. We especially thank our previous Senior Editor, Dr. William Farr for his dedication during 18 years as editor, Dr. Roger Woodruff for his monthly book reviews, Dr. Katherine Pettus for her policy pieces, and to Ms. Alison Ramsey, our current Senior Editor.
Many thanks as well to our members and readers who submit news and articles about their efforts and developments in their countries. Please remember that we accept articles for our publication that describe your progress and the programs that you are implementing in your countries, as well as news from your region. Your articles enrich our newsletter and are a crucial part of our mission to facilitate communication. Please contact Alison if you are interested in submitting a piece for our NL.
Thanks also to our webmaster, Mr. Danilo Fritzler for his excellent work in formatting and distributing the Newsletter. Each month Danilo receives the NL from Alison, transforms it into an electronic file, creates a text version and a web version, then sends it to nearly 8,000 subscribers!
International Policy
The Commission on Narcotic Drugs (NCD) in Vienna celebrated its 61st session of the last month with a focus on the rational access to controlled medicines. The IAHPC delegation was Heloisa Broggiato, Viktoriia Tymoshevska, Kseniya Shapoval, and IAHPC Advocacy Officer Dr. Katherine Pettus. Katherine’s column this month gives excellent information on exciting things happening at CND.
International Initiatives
(L-R) PAL-LIFE panelists Dr. James Cleary (PPSG), Dr. Carlos Centeno (ATLANTES), Ms. Liliana De Lima (IAHPC), Marie-Charlotte Bousseau (WHO), David Clark (U Glasgow), and Christoph Fuhr (Germany). Photo: Dr. T. Sitte
Liliana went to Rome last month to participate in the international congress of the Pontifical Academy for Life (Academia Pro Vita), which last year created a consultative group to study the expansion and development of palliative care around the world. The goal of this initiative is to make the various affected persons, both within and outside of the Church, aware of the scientific effectiveness and deep moral value of palliative care and serve as a driver to unify members of all religions and faiths in this initiative. The working group developed a series of recommendations for different stakeholder groups to promote and disseminate palliative care and the essence of caring, respect, and values of palliative care. The group of experts also presented a White Paper at the conference. We are looking forward to continuing our future work with the Academia Pro Vita. Congratulations to Monsignor Vicenzo Paglia, Dr. Nunziatta Comoretto, and Dr. Gaetano Corlone for their vision and efforts.
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.