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Debunking the myths of palliative care

IANS Sep 20, 2022

The most important ideology of palliative care is to relieve pain and other stressful symptoms that would otherwise be a problem for those suffering from serious and advanced illnesses.


Aside from addressing agony or other symptoms systemically, palliative care promotes coordinated complex therapeutic care, assisting patients and families in understanding their treatment options while each patient expresses their individual goal.

Palliative care is a relatively new speciality in the fast-changing world of health care, and as a result, it is frequently misunderstood by patients, relatives, and even some doctors. This article seeks to dispel myths about palliative care.

Palliative care means the end of life: Palliative care philosophy is about caring for the patient as a 'whole entity from the start of diagnosis. Initiation of palliative care does not mean the doctors have given up on the patient. It means facilitating the patients with the best possible quality of life, empowering them to bear the therapeutic treatment better.

If the patient is not receiving any curative treatment for the disease, it does not mean all treatment is stopped. It means treatment, support and care continue, with a different goal of continuing to keep the best possible quality and dignity of life till the end.

Palliative care means hospice care: Palliative care is holistic speciality care intended to support patients with a grave or severe illness from the time of diagnosis including treatments and hospitalisations. On the other hand, hospice care supports people with terminal illnesses who are no longer seeking healing treatments. Palliative care aids patients to increase life quality during their treatment.

It's imperative to understand that palliative care is not a hospice-centred facility. In other words, the palliative crew doesn't advocate someone into hospice but comprehends how to guard the patient and be an advocate for them.

Palliative care is only used to treat pain: Pain is a common reason for a palliative care referral and often pain medications are prescribed to ease the pain. However, palliative care looks to use medications and non-medications to treat pain such as complementary therapies and other types of non-pain medications that help with the pain.

Nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, constipation, loss of appetite, trouble sleeping, anxiety, depression, itching, and restlessness are other symptoms individuals could be experiencing apart from the pain that would qualify them for a palliative care consult.

Even patients suffering from non-physical issues such as anxiety, depression, spiritual distress, and other concerns that may impact the quality of life of patients and their near ones can be referred to palliative care.

Palliative care is just for people with terminal cancer: Palliative care can aid patients with literally any grave illness at any period of any disease and cancer is one among them. For instance, palliative care is for people with kidney, liver, lung and heart disease, diabetes, dementia, multiple sclerosis, Parkinson's disease, and rheumatoid arthritis, among many others.

Palliative care is the beginning of the end: Palliative care ensures that the patient has the best quality of life till the very end. It offers physical, emotional, social and spiritual help to the patient and their relatives. Research shows that patients with a terminal illness who get palliative care have an enhanced quality of life. They also tend to live longer than people with the same last-stage illness who do not receive palliative care.

In a nutshell palliative care: Provides relief from pain and other distressing symptoms; affirms life and regards dying as a normal process; neither aims to hasten or postpone death; integrates the psychological and spiritual aspects of patient care; offers a support system to help patients live as actively as possible until death.

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