Project Report
| Nov 17, 2023
Do you care about relieving human suffering?
By Dr Stephen Connor | Executive Director
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Over 60 million people have palliative care needs each year with only about 14% receive services. In high income countries about half of this need is being met while only about 4% in low and middle-income countries where we work.
Imagine you have just been diagnosed with metastatic cancer or heart failure and you live in a small shack near a polluted river. Your family members all have to work long hours each day to earn a meager living and you are left alone most of the time. Fortunately there is a compassionate home care team in your area that starts to visit you. The health worker, trained in palliative care, visits regulary and can call on nurses, doctors, and other caregivers to also visit if needed. She brings food, medicines, and supplies and shows family members how to help care for you as you get weaker. She is a caring and compassionate person committed to visiting regularly to make sure you are safe and well enough as your illness progresses.
WHPCA is working to help our members bring this kind of care to those in resource poor settings that suffer and die without the help they need. We need your support to continue our work and to bridge the Access Abyss to palliative care services. Please help us by donating today!
Jul 20, 2023
Achieving Universal Access to Palliative Care!
By Dr Stephen Connor | Executive Director
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Imagine living in a low or middle income country (LMIC) and you notice that you have a wound that will not heal. If you are lucky you get to see a physician a nurse or maybe there is only a community health worker or traditional healer. You are told that you have cancer and that the treatment is so expensive that it will take much more than all the money you have. You own land and sell it to pay for the radiation and chemotherapy treatment. A few months pass by and the wound returns this time bigger and more painful than before. You try using a traditional remedy like crushed black cumin and honey but the pain is getting worse and you are getting weaker. Your family cares for you but they don't know what to do to help you. There is no palliative or home care to help them with your care or to give you medicine for your pain. You get weaker and weaker and can't stand the suffering. After a few weeks you can't get out of bed and finally take your last breaths while your family helplessly witnesses your suffering and begins the grieving process.
This is the reality of what dying is like today in most of the world whether it's from cancer, HIV, heart failure, lung or kidney disease or dementia. The experience would be very different if there were a palliative care service there throughout the illlness to provide guidance. Over 80% of people needing palliative care live in LMICs and while high income counries have good access to palliative care only 4% of the need in LMICs is being met! Most cancers in LMICs are diagnosed at advanced stages when conventional treatments are unlikey to achieve a cure. Many people become impoverished paying for treatments that are non-beneficial. Simple morphine is not available in most countries and 80+% of the world's population lacks access to effective pain relief. When palliative care services are in place and access to pain relief is accessible these experiences are vastly different. Pain is controlled, families are educated about how to provide care, psychological, social, and spiritual needs are addressed and families are supported during bereavement.
WHPCA helps its organizational members all around the world to grow their palliative care services and advocates for palliaive care in the global policy arenas including the World Health Organization, the World Health Assembly, the United Nations and many other global organizations. Every country needs to have palliative care in their health care system as part of universal Health Coverage (UHC). Without palliative care there is no UHC. WHPCA is a small international NGO and depends on grants an donations to operate. WE need your support to continue to exist and to make sure that we do all we can to close the ACCESS ABYSS to palliative care and pain relief around the world.
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Mar 22, 2023
The Access Abyss is Real!
By Dr Stephen Connor | Executive Director
![Palliative Care Assts]()
Palliative Care Assts
Imagine you have just been diagnosed with a serious illness like advanced cancer or heart failure, you are living in a low or middle-income country, and your physicians are offering you treatments you are unable to afford that at best may prolong your survival a few months. You are feeling pain and difficulty breathing constantly. Your family is helping to care for you but they do not know what to do or how to provide care. The country you live in has one palliative care service but it's located in a city 200 km away. There is no way to get strong pain medicine or care at home. This is the reality for over 40 million patients each year not living in a high income country. Eventualy dying without access to even basic palliative care, a health care service that is recognized by the World Health Organization as a fundamental part of the human right to health. The WHPCA is in offical relations with WHO and the UN and is working at the highest levels to gain recognition for palliative care in every country's health care system as part of Universal Health Coverage by 2030. The continuum of UHC is health -promotion-prevention-treatment-rehabilitation-and Palliative Care. The Access Abyss as described in a recent Lancet Commission report is the enormous gap in access to relief of suffering and promotion of well being. We are demonstrating throughout the world that palliative care relieves suffering, provides dignified whole person care, supports families, and reduces poverty. The WHPCA is at the forefront of this fight, but we are a small international charity that needs your help to close this Abyss! If you believe everyone deserves the right to end suffering join us and follow our updates.
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Compassionate Narayanganj
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Kenya
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