Times of Oman

Palliative care does wonders: Experts

-

“Palliative care and nursing homes are ideal PPP (Public Private Partnershi­p) projects, where private investors acting as landlords set up such facilities and enter into a long-term lease backed solutions with the government, along with specialise­d operators appointed as the tenants who provide world-class end-of-life care,” said Baqar Haider, chief executive officer of Oman Accommodat­ion Developmen­t Services (OADS).

“There may be a stigma attached to nursing homes, but I feel they both go hand-in-hand. I have personally experience­d family members in such facilities back in the United Kingdom. With the right operators, the quality of care provided is beyond what any family member can provide in their home,” he added.

Dr. Zahid Al Madhari, senior consultant at the Oncology unit at the Royal Hospital said palliative care can do wonders for the patients and add life to days, rather than just days to life.

“In one particular case that always stands out to me, there was a lady with metastatic cancer; it was everywhere, in her bones in her lungs, just everywhere. She had gone through a number of chemothera­py sessions, but her body was just not responding.”

“She was in pain and was suffering and at that time we had just started the service in palliative care then and she was one of our first patients. What was important with her was that she remain awake and conscious and be with her family on a daily basis,” said Al Madhari.

“When she was taking her pain medication­s, she was feeling a bit groggy, every time she saw the doctor, she said she was in pain, and they gave her more drugs and that were making her even drowsier.” “Before being seen by the palliative care team, she was being admitted to the accident and emergency room almost every day, complainin­g of pain. So we convinced her to be admitted to palliative care for one day, just so we could control her pain without getting her drowsy.”

“When we got her admitted and got her pain under control, just after her one day’s admission with the palliative care team, we had a lot of discussion about the symptoms, a long counsellin­g session with her and her family in setting plans and goals, and after her discharge, she was never admitted to the hospital for a year until a week before her death,” revealed Al Madhari. “So from almost being admitted to the hospital on a daily basis, to no symptoms, and in the third month of her follow up in the palliative care clinic, she came and said she was symptom free, as if the cancer had gone.”

“This is really a testament that we can actually control symptoms, and it’s a crime that we actually have patients that are suffering when we have the medication, capabiliti­es and know how to make them pain free, and not suffer,” explained Al Madhari.

“This lady lived symptom-free for a whole year with her loved ones; she only came to the clinic for some minor adjustment­s, so all of this was quality time for her, in contrast with coming to the accident and emergency unit every day until 3 or 4 am in the morning,” Al Madhari concluded.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman