Integrating palliative care and symptom relief into primary health care
6
Many countries also lack rehabilitation medicine specialists and services and long-term care facilities to
care for people with non-life-threatening but serious disabilities such as paraplegia or quadriplegia or
those due to brain injuries or congenital anomalies. In
addition, mental health services and social welfare
programmes may be of limited capacity, difficult to access or unavailable. Palliative care can help to fill
these needs (Table 1). Further, the types of suffering typically associated with life-threatening illness – pain,
other physical symptoms, psychological symptoms – also occur acutely or in association with non-life-
threatening conditions. But in low-resource settings, prevention and relief of acute
or non-life-threatening
suffering typically are inadequate or unavailable. In countries where pain medicine does not yet exist as a
specialty and where prevention and relief of pain from trauma or burns or surgery are inadequate, clinicians
trained in palliative care can fill this therapeutic void. In these settings, clinicians trained in palliative care
can intervene either by training colleagues in symptom control, by providing direct symptom relief, or both.
Planning and implementing palliative care services should be based on assessment
of the types and extent
of inadequately prevented or relieved physical, psychological, social or spiritual suffering. This attention to
local needs is necessary for palliative care services to be people-centred: tailored to local need and to the
needs of individual patients and families (Annex 3)
(1,6).