Health Care Without the Pain

August 20, 2010 | by

As someone who has worked in palliative care for more than three decades, I am heartened by the recent surge in articles in the mainstream and medical press on the importance of providing palliative care and pain relief for patients with life-threatening illnesses. From the British Medical Journal to the New York Times, these articles highlight what many of us have been saying for years: hospice and palliative care services should be provided concurrently with disease therapy—such as chemotherapy or antiretroviral treatment for AIDS patients—and these services should be provided at every level of the health care system and at home.

A new study published this week in the New England Journal of Medicine shows that hospice and palliative care improve the quality of life of patients with life-threatening diseases such as cancer, AIDS, renal disease, or neurodegenerative disease. The media attention is long overdue but it serves to remind us how great the need is to improve the care of patients with life-threatening illnesses.

The Open Society Foundations has been working to improve the experience of death and dying since 1995. It is an issue that is very close to home: Our founder and chairman George Soros has spoken very openly about his personal experience with the deaths of both of his parents. His experience led him to the conviction that no patient should suffer needlessly from untreated pain, and that patients and their families deserve emotional and social support as they are confronted with the most important event in their lives.

Our International Palliative Care Initiative works to address the needs so often stated by patients and families: their pain is unbearable; their doctors don’t know how to help them; they are not getting morphine or other pain-relieving medications; they are too sick to get to the doctor or the hospital to get the help they need. Patients know that their suffering is unnecessary but they don’t know what to do about it.

Physicians and nurses around the world are also frustrated. They tell us that they never learned how to assess or manage pain and that they don’t have access to the pain-relieving medications their patients need. They want to learn how to communicate better with their patients and their patients’ families. They want to develop programs that will help their patients, which is why they entered the medical profession to begin with. Ultimately, they want to provide palliative care services to patients in hospitals and in their homes.

To meet these needs, we are working to include palliative care courses in medical and nursing school training in Africa, South East Asia, and Eastern Europe. We are also providing palliative care training to doctors and nurses who are already working in communities. A major obstacle we face is heavy restrictions on opioid medicines like morphine. In Ukraine, for example, morphine remains out of reach for most patients. Patients who do receive pain relief are only getting a tiny fraction of the dose that is commonly prescribed in countries such as the United States.

Patients and physicians alike are stepping up to demand that pain-relieving medicines be available and affordable. Luckily, their voices are being heard and this critical issue is gaining global attention. Organizations such as the World Health Organization, the International Union Against Cancer, Human Rights Watch, and the International Narcotics Control Board have placed opioid availability near the top of their agendas. Last month in Vienna, the International AIDS Society gave palliative care a prominent spot at its conference attended by more than 20,000 scientists, health care professionals, activists, and government representatives.

The word is getting out, at long last, that patients do not need to suffer. They have a human right to pain relief, a right to receive health care from a trained medical professional, and a right to palliative care in their communities. And we are making progress to fulfill those rights. Health care professionals are being trained, more governments are beginning to make pain-relieving medicines available in their countries, hospice and palliative care services are slowly being developed—though not fast enough to meet the demand.

We know the process takes time. But for patients who are suffering with uncontrolled pain—and their families who stand by feeling helpless—the time must be now. We need more funding and political commitment for palliative care. National governments and international organizations (like the WHO, USAIDS, and the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria) must increase funding for hospice and palliative care. The science, and in turn the media, finally caught on to what we’ve long known in our hearts: palliative care works. And it can actually help people live longer and happier lives.

Marie Osmond Promises 'Safe' Radio Show

AP Online March 12, 2004 | MARK THIESSEN, Associated Press Writer MARK THIESSEN, Associated Press Writer AP Online 03-12-2004 Dateline: LEHI, Utah in our site marie osmond wedding

Marie Osmond answers questions during a news conference about her new radio show Tuesday, March 9, 2003, in Lehi, Utah. Osmond is taking the shock out of jock. As the Federal Communications Commission cracks down on indecency in the industry, Osmond's nationally syndicated and family friendly-radio show, "Marie & Friends," is hitting the airwaves. (AP Photo/Douglas C. Pizac) Marie Osmond is taking the shock out of jock. As the Federal Communications Commission cracks down on broadcast indecency, Osmond's nationally syndicated and family friendly radio show, "Marie & Friends," is hitting the airwaves.

"It's safe radio," said the 44-year-old Osmond, a member of the famously squeaky-clean performing Utah family. "That's one of the things we're going for is to be safe, and funny and clever and quick-witted without getting to the blue side." The debut of Osmond's show last month came as broadcasters nationwide are responding to pressure generated by Janet Jackson's Super Bowl flash.

"We all have choices," said Osmond, whose show mixes congenial conversation and the occasional celebrity guest with familiar songs. "You have to be 21 to be able to go into a strip bar. Why are you bringing the strip bar into my living room?" She has tailored the show primarily for women, but counts her eight children, her 78-year-old mother, men and truck drivers among her listeners.

"It's informative and it's fun and we're a little crazy," she said. "But it's something you don't feel like you have to explain to your 6-year-old later in the evening, and try to fill her in on information that she's too young to understand." "Marie & Friends" is a five-hour afternoon drive time program syndicated by Jones Radio Network. So far it airs on stations in Salt Lake City; Boise, Idaho; Yakima, Wash.; Santa Monica, Calif.; and Santa Maria, Calif. see here marie osmond wedding

This is Osmond's first foray into radio, but she said she was well prepped for the work after doing years of live radio interviews. "The only training is what's up here, a quick wit," she said, pointing to her head.

A lifetime in show business doesn't hurt, either.

Osmond first performed at age 3 on "The Andy Williams Show." At age 13, she had a No. 1 hit on the pop and country charts with "Paper Roses." In 1976, she and her brother became the youngest ever television hosts with "The Donny and Marie Show." After the show, Marie Osmond continued acting, but branched out to meatier stage roles on Broadway and cross-country tours. Later, she rejoined her brother for a short-lived television talk show, canceled in 2000.

She's also a businesswoman whose three enterprises includes a line of collectible dolls. Osmond also is the co-founder of the Children's Miracle Network.

Along with the much storied success have come some very public setbacks.

She left her family for a few days after suffering postpartum depression in 1999. A year later, she and her second husband, Brian Blosil, briefly separated.

She admitted, but gave few details in her autobiography, that she was sexually abused as a child. And later, as an adolescent Hollywood star appearing alongside busty women like Raquel Welch and Farrah Fawcett, developed an eating disorder.

"You know, I've been through a lot of things, so I feel like (listeners) think they can relate to me," she said.

But this isn't an advice show. "Life can be heavy," she said. "When you turn on the radio, you want something that will pick you up, make you laugh, and make you feel like, 'I can do this.'" ___ On the Net:

Marie Osmond's radio show: www.radiomarie.com

MARK THIESSEN, Associated Press Writer

3 Comments to “Health Care Without the Pain”

  1. Dear Marry,
    I am so glad ro read your text about Palliative Care.
    As you know well, problem with Palliative CPCare in my coutry, Croatia is stil same.Until know, we have not any kind service of PC.More than 10 years we figthing for establisj Palliative care as part of health system of Croatia.
    Dear Marry, because of that, group of us founded new NGO-CENTER FOR PALLIATIVE CARE AND MEDICINE, and we need support of you and Initiarive, expecially in education in Palliativae care.
    Sincerally yours
    Matija Rimac, MD
    Zagreb, Croatia

  2. On September 24th, 2010 at 3:51 am, Marie Coughlan said:

    Dear Mary,

    Thank you so much for that heartfelt summary of the need for palliative care around the world. It is really inspiring that your programme continues to work against all the barriers, and with some very committed individuals and organisations, to provide palliative care. It certainly is wonderful to finally see published what we in palliative care have always known - that palliative care can both prolong life AND dramatically improve quality of life, and that active treatment and palliative care can and should go hand in hand, appropriately to patients' needs . Good luck with all the future work and I hope OSI has the benefit of your expertise and commitment for years to come.

    Sincerely,
    Marie Coughlan
    Sydney, Australia

  3. The rights of humans come from their own ability to take care of themselves...They need to grow up in a moral environment where parents teach the child to do no harm to him or herself....Then the world would be a better place

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The Open Society Foundations work to improve the lives of the world's most vulnerable people and to promote human rights, justice, and accountability. This blog aims to bring that work a little closer by giving our experts and grantees a platform to reflect on their issues, sharpen their thinking, and engage in a conversation on how to advance open society values around the globe.

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