St Christopher's Hospice, 51-59 Lawrie Park Road, Sydenham, London SE26 6JZ, UK
| INTRODUCTION |
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But what if no cure was possible and the end of life was inevitable? Referring particularly to the hospice movement, Wall added that The old methods of care and caring had to be rediscovered and the best of modern medicine had to be turned to the task of new study and therapy specifically directed at pain. Care, matched with an increasingly sound evidence base, was by then underpinned by the concept of total paindefined in 1964 as including not only physical symptoms but also mental distress and social or spiritual problems3. This approach met ready audiences among nursing and medical students during lectures or in articles, as well as social workers and more gradually among senior members of the medical profession.
| AN EVIDENCE BASE |
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| A PERSONAL HISTORY |
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A hope of returning to nursing in this field was countered by the surgeon Norman Barrett who said Go and read medicine. It's the doctors who desert the dying and there's so much to be learned about pain. If you don't do it properly you'll only be frustrated, and they won't listen to you.
There followed seven years of voluntary work as a nurse in an early home which gave me the first experience of the effectiveness of small regular doses of oral morphine. This was combined with a medical training during the pharmacological explosion of the 1950s and led to seven years of clinical care and research at St Joseph's Hospice from 1958. The introduction of the detailed recording of an oral and regular regimen, and the development of symptom control with the drugs becoming available, led to the change expressed by one of the nuns nursing there as from painful to pain free. The basic methodology of listening and tape-recording, coupled with a commitment to the day-to-day care of patients with advanced malignant disease in the 45 beds, was the basis of the analysis of 1100 cases in a punch-card system (this being the precomputer age). As in Hinton's seminal paper, patient's comments were used as illustrationsIt seemed that all of me was wrong; It was all pain, but now it's gone and I'm free; They used to want me to hold on a bit longerI was sweating with the painbut now I feel so calm.
| A DEMONSTRATION PROJECT |
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The medical foundation was based on the clinical experience and research at St Joseph's Hospice and all that had led up to it, alongside extensive reading in the library of the Royal Society of Medicine. Anecdote heavily outweighed studies but, by 1967, 184 references had been assembled. The work at the hospice had been enthusiastically welcomed because it had been possible to demonstrate that patients could be free of pain and still alert, responsive and remaining themselves. The Londoners from the disadvantaged East End joined gladly in the medical student teaching rounds. Their stories and the growing body of evidence that tolerance and drug dependence did not develop were the basis of lectures and articles7,8.
These beginnings pointed to work that would be conducted when the new hospice was finally built and opened for inpatient and home care and for research into the relief of distress. The methods used were those that could be widely transferable, with multiprofessional education planned to rely heavily on clinical experience.
The spiritual needs of patients and families struggling with what might seem pointless suffering were a greater challenge. Fear and grief were often inarticulate. How could we make sure the hospice was not seen as a death house? How would the earlier traditions of the religious charities be interpreted in an increasingly secular world? In the end, this new charity was based on extremely broad spiritual foundations. That There shall be a Chapel, available for Christian worship emphasized that there would be no pressure on anyone, staff or patient, to enter it and no bar to other faiths doing so.
Finally, how to support the staff whose care had to be of a nature that would reach the most hidden places of distress? It was anticipated that there would be a more flexible commitment than among the nuns at St Joseph's Hospice but with some form of community ethos. After much debate, I wrote, I think we will know when we get there and, later, We are a community of the unlike. By the end of 1960, these issues had been addressed and a basis laid for future development.
St Christopher's Hospice opened in 1967 with a building for 54 patients, a 16-bed residential wing for the elderly, a nursery for staff children and a planned bereavement service. Home care, which had been incorporated in the plans from the beginning, started nearly two years later. Both the early drug studies and the home-care outreach were funded by the National Health Service. Currently, nearly ten times more patients are being cared for at home than as inpatients.
| SPREADING CONTACTS |
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| WHERE DID WE GO RIGHT? |
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Secondly, the fostering of links with basic and clinical pain researchers and other allied workers on both sides of the Atlantic, through voluminous correspondence since 1960 and numerous visits, provided stimulating interchanges. Without these, other international links in palliative care would not have developed.
Thirdly, efforts to change attitudes to end-of-life care were, and still are, based on rigorous philosophical, political and spiritual discussions. From the beginning the emphasis was on living until you die. The substantial body of indexed archives, attributable to a jackdaw-like character, offers material for a fruitful and stimulating study.
| WHERE DID WE GO WRONG? |
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Secondly, the focus on the diagnosis of cancer sometimes hindered the acceptance of challenges in other areas of need, HIV/AIDS being a case in point. But how do we balance need, skills and resources?
Thirdly, although we looked to a research and educational base, we were too slow in establishing full academic rigour (and still have some way to go). Indeed, learning and discovery must surely be endless.
Finally, the concentration in a building, at least in the UK, tended to outweigh the emphasis on home care. Palliative care is a philosophy based not on physical facilities but on attitudes and skills, as the many interpretations around the industrialized and developing world show forcefully.
| FOR THE FUTURE |
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We need to focus more on the discrepancy between the developed and developing worlds in terms of medical care and research, epidemiological and clinical. Validated tools for assessing quality of life should be more widely used with this challenge in mind.
Psychological issues for patients and families should be studied, with recognition of profound (though often unarticulated) spiritual and existential distress. Academic centres with multiprofessional teams have the potential to develop recognized standards. These should be offered as part of the ongoing commitment to every person in need of care for progressive disease, and should incorporate the same urge for exploration as characterized at the earlier stages. Our common humanity demands no less.
| REFERENCES |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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P. N. Lanken, P. B. Terry, H. M. DeLisser, B. F. Fahy, J. Hansen-Flaschen, J. E. Heffner, M. Levy, R. A. Mularski, M. L. Osborne, T. J. Prendergast, et al. An Official American Thoracic Society Clinical Policy Statement: Palliative Care for Patients with Respiratory Diseases and Critical Illnesses Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., April 15, 2008; 177(8): 912 - 927. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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S. Ahmad and M.S. O'Mahony Where older people die: a retrospective population-based study QJM, December 1, 2005; 98(12): 865 - 870. [Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF] |
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K. Kafetz What happens when elderly people die? J R Soc Med, January 11, 2002; 95(11): 536 - 538. [Full Text] [PDF] |
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