Epilogue: Reflections from Stakeholders of a Facilitated Community Partnership Developed to Provide Palliative Care to a Vulnerable Population in Kerala

Author:

Thelly Anu Savio Savio1,Rose M. Jima2,Rana Smriti3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Palliative Medicine, Mahatma Gandhi Medical College and Research Institute, Puducherry, India,

2. Coastal Students Cultural Forum, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India,

3. Pallium India Trust, Aisha Memorial Hospital Building, Thiruvananthapuram, Kerala, India,

Abstract

Introduction: In mid-March 2020, the Kerala government implemented additional preventive measures to the steps already taken to reduce the transmission of COVID-19. Strategies were taken by a non-governmental palliative care organisation (Pallium India) with Coastal Students Cultural Forum – a coastal area-based collective of young educated people in the coastal region to address the medical needs of people living in this community. The facilitated partnership lasted 6 months (July–December 2020) and addressed the palliative care needs of the community in the selected coastal regions during the first wave of the pandemic. Volunteers sensitised by the NGO identified more than 209 patients. The current article highlights the reflective narratives of key players in this facilitated community partnership. Materials and Method: The current article is dedicated to highlighting the reflective narratives of key players in this facilitate community partnership to the readers of this journal. The palliative care team’s overall experience was collected from selected key participants to understand the program’s impact, identify areas of improvement, and discuss possible solutions if there were any challenges. The contents below are their statements on the experience of the entire program. Conclusion: Palliative care delivery programmes must be configured to respond to local needs and customs, be community-based and integrated with local health and social care and have accessible referral pathways between and across services. They must also be responsive to changing individual and population needs and shifts in local and national health structures.

Publisher

Scientific Scholar

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

Reference17 articles.

1. COVID-19 Threatens to Engulf Kerala's Coastal Belt,2020

2. Palliative care for vulnerable populations;Stienstra;Palliat Support Care,2012

3. Local government-led community-based palliative care programmes in Kerala;Raj;Rajagiri J Soc Dev,2016

4. The Kerala model: Its central tendency and the outlier;Kurien;Soc Sci,1995

5. Kerala, India's front runner in novel coronavirus disease (COVID-19);Kumar;Front Med,2020

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