1
Project on Death in America, Open Society Institute, New York
2
Pain and Palliative Care Service, Department of Neurology, Memorial
Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, 1275 York Avenue, New York NY 10021, USA
Correspondence to: Dr Kathleen Foley E-mail: foleyk{at}mskcc.org
| INTRODUCTION |
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This American perspective expressed in the IOM recommendations is not dissimilar from published international recommendations. The Expert Task Force of the World Health Organization, in its 1990 publication Cancer Pain Relief and Palliative Care2, called on governments to ensure that healthcare workers are adequately trained in palliative care and the relief of pain and recommended that palliative-care courses be an obligatory part of the basic training and certification of healthcare workers. These sentiments were echoed in Recommendation 1418 of the 1999 Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, Protection of the Human Rights and Dignity of the Terminally Ill and Dying3. In the Council's view, one factor threatening the fundamental rights of terminally ill and dying patients was a lack of continuing education and psychological support for professionals working in palliative medicine. The Council recommended that member States be encouraged to develop and implement standards for highquality training. In short, there is growing international advocacy for professional education in end-of-life care.
The United States' efforts to improve education in end-of-life care consist of a series of initiatives focused on: undergraduate, graduate and continuing education; faculty development; and a series of overarching efforts, such as the development of palliative care associations, programmes in distance learning and website networks. These approaches, directed at reducing the barriers for healthcare professionals, are briefly described in the following sections. They represent a wide range of efforts at various stages of development, and their impact on professional education cannot yet be assessedand still less the impact on care for the 2.5 million Americans who die each year. Concurrent efforts to transform the culture of death in America and eliminate institutional, economic and social barriers are also underway.
| Box 1 Recommendations from the Institute of Medicine's
Approaching Death (Ref.
1)
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| UNDERGRADUATE EDUCATION |
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The National Board of Medical Examiners, which examines medical students after their second and fourth years of training, have expanded the number of questions in their exams concerning pain and symptom management, palliative care and end-of-life care issues. Although medical schools are not yet mandated to develop curricula in end-of-life care, these initiatives and model programmes represent a promising trend.
| GRADUATE EDUCATION |
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To address these deficiencies, the National Internal Medicine Residency Curriculum Project has been mounted to train residency directors and chief residents who, in turn, will become trainers at their own institutions in end-of-life care. The project includes training opportunities for over 180 internal medicine programmes. This effort is linked to an educational resource centre, the End-of-Life Physician Education Resource Center, whose role is to provide instructional and evaluation materials and serve as a central repository for peer-reviewed educational materials and information [www.eperc.mcw.edu]. Both these initiatives are directed by Dr David Weissman at the University of Wisconsin, Milwaukee.
Since graduate education in the USA is heavily influenced by the subspecialty academic societies, a major step towards reforming residency education has been the adoption of core principles for end-of-life care by a substantial number of these societies13. Seventeen societies and the Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations have adopted policies that embrace the core principles. Agreement on these care principles has had major implications for the acceptance of the term palliative care in specialty-based organizations, many of which are now working to develop clinical methods, tools and guidelines to meet the needs of dying patients. At the same time they are addressing the need for professional education on these aspects of care.
A national consensus conference on Medical Education for Caring at the End of Life, in 1997, brought together 69 medical educators from various subspecialties who made the following four recommendations to improve education in palliative care: (1) the Liaison Committee on Medical Education should include a requirement that all medical students demonstrate competence in end-of-life care as a condition of medical school graduation; (2) the residency review committees, primary care specialties, and all other specialties in which there is significant contact with dying patients would set minimum standards for faculty training in end-of-life care and for resident experiences in care of dying patients, and, to ensure competency, programme directors should require that residents are directly observed while interacting with dying patients and their families; (3) medical specialty boards should integrate end-of-life care into their examinations; and (4) public and private funding sources, including the National Institutes of Health, should be encouraged to support programmes that train faculty, so as to meet the shortage of faculty trained in end-of-life care14. A series of consensus papers have indicated how the various medical subspecialties can educate their members4,15,16,17,18,19,20.
Fellowship training in palliative care
About nineteen programmes in palliative care offer fellowship training
[www.capcmssm.org/fellowship.html],
sometimes in cancer centres, sometimes in the palliative care services of
general hospitals. The American Board of Hospice and Palliative Medicine has
created a task force to develop specific requirements for such fellowship
training programmes and fellowship certification, with the goal of
subspecialty certification in palliative medicine.
Faculty development programmes
Clearly, faculty has great potential to advance educational and clinical
care services as well as research on end-of-life care. The Veterans
Administration Faculty Leaders Project
[www.va.gov/onn.flp]
is a two-year initiative in which faculty leaders develop end-of-life and
palliative care curricula to be used in training of resident physicians. The
four aims of this project are to develop benchmark curricula and training
strategies; to integrate curricula into thirty VA internal medicine residency
programmes; to increase the number of internal medicine faculty leaders and
innovators; and to make available specific curricula to VA-affiliated internal
medicine residency programmes. Since one out of seven Americans die in the
care of the VA system, the development of palliative care education within
this healthcare delivery system is critical.
Two university-based faculty development programmes are Harvard Medical School Center for Palliative Care's programme of Palliative Care Education and Practices [www.hms.harvard.edu/cdi/pallcare/] and the Stanford Faculty Development Program in End-of-Life Care (www.stanford.edu/group/SFDP/eolcare.html ). They train physician and nurse educators in both clinical practice and teaching methods of interdisciplinary palliative care; they also offer instruction in developing and managing institutional programmes.
The Project on Death in America Faculty Scholars Program is a foundation-funded faculty development initiative. To date, it has funded 78 physicians and nurses who have been identified as outstandingly committed to improving end-of-life care [www.soros.org/death]. The programme's aim is to promote the visibility and prestige of such clinicians and to enhance their effectiveness as academic leaders, role models and mentors.
Continuing medical education
The American Medical Association has developed a Compassionate Competent
Care Initiative to ensure that practising physicians are equipped with the
knowledge and skills to provide the best possible care for dying patients.
This includes the wide dissemination of a train-the-trainer curriculum,
Education of Physicians in End-of-Life Care (EPEC), consisting of four
thirty-minute plenary modules and twelve forty-five-minute workshop modules
[www.epec.net].
The EPEC listserv also allows individuals who have trained in EPEC, or have an
interest in end-of-life care, to communicate informally via e-mail.
The American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine has created a curriculum consisting of twenty integrated, clinically oriented, self-contained self-instructional modules. They are designed for use by practising physicians, residents and medical students in academic centres and in hospice and palliative care programmes.
Various subspecialty groups, including the American Academy of Neurology, the American College of Surgeons and the American Society of Clinical Oncology, have sponsored programmes on palliative care at their national meetings. In addition, the American Academy of Neurology and the American Society of Clinical Oncology have surveyed their memberships on end-of-life issues21,22 and have published consensus statements on the role of these specialties in palliative care23,31.
Several national centres have developed to focus attention on education, research and policy development, including the Center to Advance Palliative Care at Mount Sinai School of Medicine [www.capcmssm.org], the Duke Institute on Care at the End of Life [www.iceol.duke.edu], and the RAND Center to Improve the Care of the Dying [www.rand.org/health.dying.html]. In addition, numerous journals have been startedboth in print and onlineto provide peer-reviewed information on palliative care.
Physician certification
The American Board of Hospice and Palliative Medicine has developed a
palliative care certification programme
[www.abhpm.org/default.htm].
The eligibility criteria require that a physician be licensed and certified by
an American Board of Medical Specialties approved board or equivalent.
Currently, there are 779 board-certified physicians in palliative care, most
of them coming from internal medicine and family practice.
Nursing education
A national initiative focused on nursing education is the End-of-Life
Nursing Education Consortium
[www.aacn.nche.edu/elnec].
Its major goals are to develop a core of expert nursing educators, to
coordinate national nursing efforts in end-of-life care and to facilitate
dissemination of a train-the-trainer programme for registered nurses.
Other efforts include the development of both a Nursing Leadership Consortium and a Nursing Leadership Institute on End-of-Life Care. The Consortium was organized to draw up a coordinated professional nursing agenda. The Institute was created to advance this agenda by increasing the leadership capacity of nurses; this initiative is creating a system of support networks and mentorships and has already led to development of a centralized Internet resource site run by Sigma Theta Tau International [www.palliativecarenursing.net]. There is also a National Board for Certification of Hospice and Palliative Care Nursing [www.hpna.org/nbchn/index.htm] which has certified some 7000 hospice and palliative care nurses24.
Education for social workers
The need for educational programmes for social work leadership is
increasingly
recognized25.
Efforts in this arena include the Project on Death in America's Social Work
Leadership Award, which to date has funded 23 individuals. These social work
leaders are charged with developing initiatives between schools of social work
and clinical practice in order to advance the role of social work in improving
end-of-life care.
Paediatric palliative care education
The Compendium on Pediatric Palliative Care has developed guidelines for
care, or Universal Principles, agreed on by a large multidisciplinary
international group of experts. This widely disseminated document can be
ordered via the NHPCH website
[www.nhpco.org].
Children's Hospice International
[www.chionline.org/pacc.html]
facilitates conferences, publications and web resources; the Academy of
Hospice and Palliative Medicine has released a UNIPAC on paediatric palliative
care; the Oxford Textbook of Palliative Medicine includes sections on
palliative care for children; and various books are available for
professionals26,27,28.
Yet at present there exist no programmes specifically for paediatric
palliative care certification.
| HIV/AIDS |
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The National Pediatric and Family HIV Resource Center is a non-profit educational centre educating professionals who care for children and families with HIV and AIDS [www.pedhivaids.org]. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases has issued an important document entitled Enhancing Supportive Care and Promoting Quality of Life: Clinical Practice Guidelines [www.niaid.gov/default.htm]. However, for adult patients with HIV/AIDS, no specific guidelines exist at present for HIV/AIDS or hospice care except the UNAIDS document AIDS: Palliative Care. New York State guidelines exist for AIDS care in nursing homes and various day programmes, and numerous publications and curriculum developments address specific needs of patients with AIDS at the end of life29,30,31,32,33,34,35,36,37. The François-Xavier Bagnoud International Pediatric HIV Training Program has commendably trained nearly 120 doctors, nurses, social workers, and other healthcare professionals from around the world in the care of children with HIV/AIDS [www.fxbcenter.org].
| THE FUTURE OF PALLIATIVE CARE EDUCATION IN THE USA |
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| REFERENCES |
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This article has been cited by other articles:
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M. D. Rothman and M. R. Gugliucci End-of-Life Care Curricula in Undergraduate Medical Education: A Comparison of Allopathic and Osteopathic Medical Schools American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine, October 1, 2008; 25(5): 354 - 360. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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K. A. Theis, J. K. Rao, L. A. Anderson, and P. M. Thompson End-of-Life Content in Comprehensive Cancer Control Plans: A Systematic Review American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine, November 1, 2007; 24(5): 390 - 398. [Abstract] [PDF] |
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