Integrating palliative care and symptom relief into primary health care
24
improper use of medications, and report their findings to a nurse-supervisor at a CHC. In this way, they can
accompany patients in need of palliative care and help to assure their comfort
by serving as the eyes and
ears of their clinicians. Based on reports from CHWs, it may be possible to arrange an appropriate response
to an uncontrolled symptom, such as a change in prescription or a home visit by a nurse, that does not
require the patient to leave home. Visits by CHWs also can help to reduce
the often heavy emotional,
physical and financial burden of family caregivers. Capable family caregivers should be trained, equipped
and encouraged by clinicians to provide basic nursing care such as wound and mouth care and medicine
administration. But care should be taken to assess for unmet social needs of family caregivers who typically
are women and who often also have work and child-care responsibilities, frequently live in poverty.
Clinicians caring for people with serious, complex or life-limiting health problems
should ask if they desire
spiritual counselling. Every effort should be made to facilitate access to spiritual counselling by local
volunteers that is appropriate to the beliefs and needs of the patient and family.
Dostları ilə paylaş: