Healthy End of Life Project (HELP): a progress report on implementing community guidance on public health palliative care initiatives in Australia

Annals of Palliative Medicine
Andrea Grindrod, Bruce Rumbold

Abstract

Contemporary end of life care policies propose increasing community capacity by developing sustainable skills, policies, structures, and resources to support members of a community in caring for each other at the end of life. Public health approaches to palliative care provide strategies to bring this about. Practical implementation can however be ineffective, principally due to failures to grasp the systemic nature of public health interventions, or to ensure that programs are managed and owned by community members, not the professionals who may have introduced them. This article outlines a comprehensive community development project that identifies local end of life needs and meets them through the efficient use of community resources. The project is the product of a three-phase enquiry. The first phase, carried out in a local community, examined carers' experiences of home-based dying, the networks that supported them during care, and broader community networks with the potential to extend care. Data were collected through in-depth research interviews, focus groups and consultation with a community research reference group. Findings were key issues to be targeted by a local community development strategy. In the second phase...Continue Reading

Citations

Mar 25, 2020·American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational Book·Amy R MacKenzie, Michelle Lasota
Jun 30, 2019·Australian Health Review : a Publication of the Australian Hospital Association·Liz ForbatImogen Mitchell
Aug 1, 2020·International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health·Viviana Davalos-BatallasRocio de Diego-Cordero
Jun 10, 2021·Palliative Care and Social Practice·Lauren J Breen
Oct 5, 2021·Journal of Social Work in End-of-life & Palliative Care·Christopher PoppeTenzin Wangmo

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