Understanding The Infl Uence of Palliative Care Nursing: A Global Perspective
Understanding The Infl Uence of Palliative Care Nursing: A Global Perspective
Understanding The Infl Uence of Palliative Care Nursing: A Global Perspective
Margaret OConnor is
Vivian Bullwinkel Chair
in Palliative Care
Nursing, School of
Nursing and Midwifery,
Monash University,
Australia
Correspondence to:
Margaret OConnor
Email: margaret.oconnor@
med.monash.edu.au
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Education
Nurses make significant contributions to
education, including formal programs, train the
trainer models and bedside teaching (Reb, 2003).
Many countries lack infrastructure within health
care in general and palliative care becomes a low
priority in places where other basic human needs
are dire. Thus education becomes difficult, with
reliance on donations or overseas aid agencies.
There are many examples of nurses who
individually give up their free time to assist with
educating colleagues in other countries, often using
annual leave to support a clinician or service.
Educational opportunities are available from
developed countries to developing countries, which
Commentary
Implementing services
In implementing services, nurses in Australia have
increasingly taken lead roles over recent years.
Literature notes the key role that the nurse leader
plays in relation to staff satisfaction and the
development of their knowledge and skills that
enable them to provide quality care (Duffield et al,
2009). In many countries (poor as well as more
developed), there are shifts away from the
traditional focus on acute care to extended roles in
primary health care models. This is no less
important in palliative care, where primary health
care models are ensuring that the skills are extended
to nurses and other health workers to provide care
for dying people wherever they are. Primary health
care models requires the community to become a
partner in the care of the dying (Stjernsward et al,
2008; Parfitt, 2009).
Research
Underpinning these aspects of the framework is
research, which should always be about improving
care of the dying. This may be through undertaking
clinical studies on symptom management, being
part of randomized controlled trials on medications,
or undertaking service system research. National
Concern has
been expressed
in the
literature
about the loss
of palliative
care nursing
knowledge as a
consequence of
role changes
Conclusion
There are a number of opportunities for palliative
care nurses to ensure that the public health
framework continues to inform the development of
palliative care worldwide. Essential aspects of this
work are the advocacy for drug availability and for
funding to establish and develop services. Nurses
will continue their core role in pain and symptom
management and there is a contemporary
opportunity to be creative with developing specialist
roles, such as the nurse practitioner. IJPN
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