Measuring palliative care integration in Malawi through service provision, access, and training indicators: the Waterloo Coalition Initiative
Malawi
Morphine
Research
Palliative Care
RC952-1245
Pain
Primary palliative care
LMIC
03 medical and health sciences
Cross-Sectional Studies
Hospice Care
Special situations and conditions
Pain relief
Palliative care
Humans
0305 other medical science
DOI:
10.1186/s12904-023-01331-0
Publication Date:
2024-01-16T09:02:34Z
AUTHORS (9)
ABSTRACT
Abstract
Background
Fewer than 1 in 20 people on the African continent in need of palliative care receive it. Malawi is a low-income country in sub-Saharan Africa that has yet to achieve advanced palliative care integration accompanied by unrestricted access to pain and symptom relieving palliative medicines. This paper studied the impact of Malawi’s Waterloo Coalition Initiative (WCI) – a local project promoting palliative care integration through service development, staff training, and increased service access.
Methods
Interdisciplinary health professionals at 13 hospitals in southern Malawi were provided robust palliative care training over a 10-month period. We used a cross-sectional evaluation to measure palliative care integration based on 11 consensus-based indicators over a one-year period.
Results
92% of hospitals made significant progress in all 11 indicators. Specifically, there was a 69% increase in the number of dedicated palliative care rooms/clinics, a total of 253 staff trained across all hospitals (a 220% increase in the region), substantive increases in the number of patients receiving or assessed for palliative care, and the number of hospitals that maintained access to morphine or other opioid analgesics while increasing the proportion of referrals to hospice or other palliative care programs.
Conclusion
Palliative care is a component of universal health coverage and Sustainable Development Goal 3. The WCI has made tremendous strides in establishing and integrating palliative care services in Malawi with notable progress across 11 project indicators, demonstrating that increased palliative care access is possible in severely resource-constrained settings through sustained models of partnership at the local level.
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