Integrating palliative care and symptom relief into primary health care
14
o appropriate treatment for common diseases and injuries, including continuity of care for people
with chronic conditions;
o basic palliative care; and
o provision of essential medicines, including essential controlled medicines such as oral and
injectable morphine;
n
should be integrated into a referral system and information system resulting in comprehensive,
coordinated and continuous health care for all;
n
should give priority to those most in need; and
n
should be provided by an appropriately trained team that includes physicians and nurses and also
may include clinical officers, assistant doctors, feldshers, nurses, midwives, community workers as
applicable, as well as traditional practitioners, as appropriate, to respond to the expressed health
needs of the community.
Overlapping principles of PHC and palliative care
The inseparability of PHC and palliative care is evident both from the Declaration of Alma-Ata (Annex 1) and
from more recent international documents on PHC (
16,17,18).World Health Assembly resolution WHA62.12
in 2009 reaffirmed the principles of PHC, including equity, solidarity, social justice, universal access to
services, multisectoral action, decentralization and community participation as the basis for strengthening
health systems (Annex 2). All are also principles of palliative care. This resolution also emphasized putting
people at the centre of health care by adopting delivery models focused on the local and district levels
that provide comprehensive PHC services. These include health promotion, disease prevention, curative
care and palliative care that are integrated with other levels of care and coordinated according to need,
while assuring effective referral to secondary and tertiary care. PHC, like palliative care, benefits from
participation of civil society and the community in policy formulation and accountability mechanisms to
ensure that the health system is socially acceptable, universally accessible and affordable, and scientifically
sound (
19). In addition, PHC and palliative care have in common an emphasis on continuity of care and
solidarity (accompaniment), respect for patients’ values and attention not only to patients, but also to their
families (
7, 20, 21).
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