Health
Latest:
Watchdog to report on NHS performance
Researchers isolate baldness gene
Nanotechnology 'to beat MRSA'
Bars could face happy hours curbs, bans on free alcohol
Unburied bodies as financial crisis worsens
NHS complaints 'take half a year'
Alcohol driving mental health problems
Mental health services 'best in Europe'
Smuggled tobacco 'kills more than illicit drugs'
Double dose needed to protect against flu pandemic
Health Archive
All news archive
More choice pledged for dying moments
16/07/2008
A strategy has been launched today that aims to give people at the end of their lives more choice about where they die.
The ten-year, £268 million scheme will ensure that community nursing services are available 24 hours a day so that more people can be cared for and die at home if they wish.
Health and social care professionals will be trained to assess the needs of patients and carers and to provide the best possible quality care.
The government will also encourage primary care trusts and hospices to work together to develop specialist services in the community.
"People coming to the end of their lives and their loved ones deserve high quality, compassionate and dignified care, on their own terms. This strategy will help make that happen," said health secretary Alan Johnson.
"We have already made £40 million available to hospices to improve environments and provide greater dignity for patients, and we recently invested £4.5 million to help build a Marie Curie state of the art hospice in the West Midlands.
"Now this increased funding will continue momentum for improvement and help make sure that everyone gets access to high quality palliative care and has choice about where that care takes place."
The strategy has been welcomed by Help the Aged, which said that the need to secure dignity in dying is of "critical importance for older people and those who care for them".
"For far too long, there has been a presumption that death should be at the convenience of the system, as opposed to respecting the individual wishes of those who are approaching their final days," commented Paul Cann, director of policy at Help the Aged.
"One area which requires particular focus is in the management of pain - Help the Aged continues to hear too many cases of older people left to face death without effective pain management. We hope that this will be a major focus within this strategy.
"All in all, this announcement today is a positive step. The challenge now is for Alan Johnson to turn his fine words into real action that secures genuine dignity in dying for all older people."
Delicious
Digg
Reddit
Facebook
StumbleUpon
Comments on this story
Add your comments here
No comments submitted yet