What matters to you
about the future of palliative and end of life care in Scotland?
I attended a recent workshop to discuss these issues which
was organised by the Palliative and End of Life Care National Advisory
Group. The participants came from a range
of organisations – NHS practitioners, voluntary sector, government and care
homes.
We discussed five key questions:
·
What have been the key achievements in the
delivery of palliative and end of life care in Scotland since the publication
of Living and Dying Well in 2008?
·
What do you see as being the main priorities and
objectives to improve palliative and end of life care in Scotland over the next
5 years and beyond?
·
What are the most significant challenges to
delivering improvements in a)access; b) quality of palliative and end of life
care in Scotland in the future?
·
How can we support these improvements a)in
access; b) in quality of care
·
What matters to you if time were to become
short?
A number of the themes which emerged have been echoed in
discussion which FiOP has enabled including:
·
Having the ‘conversation’ and being confident in
talking about death and dying
·
Destigmatise death, dying and bereavement
·
Culture specific responses
·
Ensuring that spiritual care is available and
that this is understood
·
Must be person-centred and enabling the
individual to be in as much control as possible
·
Flexible approach allowing individual choices
·
Compassion
These themes are consistently discussed and acknowledged as
being critically important so why is it so difficult to embed them in practice
not just in relation to end of life care but all care?
Edinburgh Roadshow Summary Report
Edinburgh Roadshow Summary Report
Maureen O’Neill
July 2015
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