亚太地区的姑息治疗教育:发展姑息治疗的挑战和进展

Pub Date : 2021-09-03 DOI:10.1080/09699260.2021.1976951
Jason Mills, Sun-Hyun Kim, H. Chan, Mu-Hsing Ho, J. Montayre, Megan F. Liu, Chia-chin Lin
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引用次数: 7

摘要

虽然获得姑息治疗在国际上被公认为一项人权,但从全球健康的角度来看,提供姑息治疗的专业服务存在许多差距,同时也存在着对需要获得姑息治疗的人的相应健康不平等。姑息治疗发展,或建立和扩大姑息治疗服务,是解决这些差距和健康不平等问题的一项关键战略。姑息治疗的发展取决于各种因素,包括医疗服务及其临床护理的提供,以及根据不同国家和地区的指导方针和政策进行的教育、研究和持续的专业发展活动。与全球许多地区的情况一样,有必要在亚太地区进一步发展和促进获得优质临终关怀和姑息治疗的机会——与社区合作,确保以公平的方式满足他们的需求。姑息治疗发展的关键组成部分之一是对医疗专业人员、政策制定者和公众的教育。亚太临终关怀网络过去对成员国进行的一项调查发现,尽管澳大利亚、新西兰、新加坡、马来西亚、香港、日本、韩国和台湾的护理服务普遍发展良好,但仍有必要加强医疗保健提供者的姑息治疗教育。在这方面,在第二本全球姑息治疗地图集出版后,香港大学与台湾卫生福利部和台北医科大学合作举办了一次网上研讨会,广泛关注亚太地区姑息治疗发展的转型。2021年5月,来自亚太地区的国际姑息治疗专家通过网络研讨会举行了一次虚拟聚会,更具体地讨论了姑息治疗教育作为亚太地区姑息治疗发展的重要组成部分。在香港大学林嘉钦教授的正式介绍下,刘副教授促成了专家的贡献和与其他参与者的互动讨论。来自台北医科大学。来自澳大利亚、香港、韩国和日本的贡献者分享了姑息治疗教育的经验和观点。在澳大利亚,国家姑息治疗战略自2000年作为一个政策框架成立以来,为国家项目提供了大量资金,如本科生姑息治疗课程,该课程为多学科医疗保健学生和教育工作者提供了在线姑息治疗教育资源。然而,它的姑息治疗内容在多大程度上被纳入课程中,这在很大程度上是未知的,而且可能在选择实施它的高等教育提供者中不一致。虽然一些大学在护理学士课程中提供姑息治疗教育作为选修科目,大多数都不提供任何离散的研究单位和专注于姑息治疗的正式评估。其他大学,如澳大利亚托伦斯大学,通过合作创新率先开发了一门为期12周的强制性姑息治疗和生命限制条件课程;阳光海岸大学(University of the Sunshine Coast)也走上了类似的道路,为护理专业的学生开设了为期8周的临终关怀必修课程。随着时间的推移,本科医学教育的姑息治疗内容不断发展和加强,澳大利亚皇家医学院澳大利亚姑息医学分会通过其姑息医学高级培训课程或姑息医学临床文凭课程提供了全面的研究生专业培训选项。姑息治疗研究生奖学金
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Palliative care education in the Asia Pacific: Challenges and progress towards palliative care development
While access to palliative care is recognized internationally as a human right, from a global health perspective, there are many gaps within the professional services that provide palliative care together with corresponding health inequities for people needing to access palliative care. Palliative care development, or the building and expansion of palliative care services, represents a key strategy in addressing those gaps and health inequities. The development of palliative care depends on various factors including healthcare services and their provision of clinical care, as well as education, research and ongoing professional development activities in accordance with guidelines and policies across different countries and regions. As is the case with many regions across the globe, there is a need to further develop and promote access to quality hospice and palliative care in the Asia Pacific – reaching out to work in partnership together with communities and ensuring that their needs are met in a way that is equitable. One of the key components of palliative care development is the education of healthcare professionals, policymakers, and the public. A past survey of member countries from the Asia Pacific Hospice Network found that although care services were generally well developed in Australia, New Zealand, Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Japan, South Korea, and Taiwan, there was a need to strengthen palliative care education for healthcare providers. In this context and following the publication of the second Global Atlas of Palliative Care, the University of Hong Kong together with the Health Promotion Administration, Ministry of Health and Welfare in Taiwan and Taipei Medical University, collaborated to host an online symposium with a broad focus on the Transition of Palliative Care Development in the Asia Pacific Region. In May 2021, a virtual gathering of international palliative care experts from the Asia Pacific came together via webinar to discuss, more specifically, palliative care education as an important component of palliative care development in the Asia Pacific Region. After a formal introduction from Prof. Chia-Chin Lin at the University of Hong Kong, expert contributions and interactive discussion with other participants were facilitated by Assoc. Prof. Megan F. Liu. from Taipei Medical University. Experiences of and perspectives on palliative care education were shared by contributors from Australia, Hong Kong, South Korea and Japan. In Australia, the National Palliative Care Strategy has, since its inception as a policy framework in 2000, delivered significant funding for national projects such as the Palliative Care Curriculum for Undergraduates that has provided an online palliative care education resource for multidisciplinary healthcare students and educators. However, the extent to which its palliative care content is integrated within curricula is largely unknown and likely to be inconsistent across the higher education providers that might choose to implement it. While some universities offer palliative care education as an elective subject within Bachelor of Nursing curricula, most do not offer any discrete unit of study and formal assessment focused on palliative care. Other universities, such as Torrens University Australia, have led the way through collaborative innovation to develop a mandatory, 12week subject on palliative care and life-limiting conditions; the University of the Sunshine Coast hasfollowed a similar path in developing a mandatory 8week course on end-of-life care for nursing students. Undergraduate medical education has evolved and strengthened in its palliative care content over time, and comprehensive postgraduate specialty training options are made available by the Royal Australasian College of Physicians Australasian Chapter of Palliative Medicine through its Palliative Medicine Advanced Training Curriculum or Clinical Diploma in Palliative Medicine pathway. Award postgraduate studies in palliative care have
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