The New World of Palliative Care State of Reform Conference January 8, 2015 Barbara Flye, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network

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Presentation transcript:

The New World of Palliative Care State of Reform Conference January 8, 2015 Barbara Flye, American Cancer Society Cancer Action Network

1.Understanding the patient landscape 2.Why is palliative care so important? 3.What issues/challenges do we face in ensuring access to palliative care services? 4.What can policy makers do to increase awareness and access to palliative care? Today’s Presentation

Patient Landscape: Cancer Survivor numbers now and looking aheadThe American Cancer Society’s 2014 Cancer Facts & Figures Statistics Report estimates:  1.67 million new cancer cases and 585,720 cancer deaths annually  14 million survivors now. This will jump to 18 million by 2022  Nearly 380,000 cancer survivors of childhood and adolescent cancer  Most experience persisting pain, symptoms and stress that affect quality of life for both patient AND loved ones.

Palliative Care… Focuses on relieving the pain, symptoms, and stress of a serious illness – whatever the diagnosis. The goal is to improve quality of life for both the patient and the family. It is appropriate at any age and at any stage and can be provided along with curative treatment. Definition developed through consumer research commissioned by CAPC and the Society/ACS CAN. Shareable summary of findings available at What is Palliative Care?

Why is Palliative Care Important? FACT: Treating the pain, symptoms, and stress of cancer is as important as treating the cancer.

Palliative care improves the quality of health care  Effectively relieves physical symptoms and emotional suffering  Strengthens patient-family-physician communication and decision making  Ensures well-coordinated care across health care settings The Benefits of Palliative Care

Consumer Awareness about Palliative Care Data from a Public Opinion Strategies nationwide survey, June 2011

Patients & Families Want Palliative Care

What issues and challenges do we face? Unprecedented growth of an aging population & ability to live longer lives with serious illnesses Necessity to recognize & treat pain & other distressing symptoms Many in the health care industry still confuse or frame palliative care as end-of-life care Lack of awareness among patients with serious illness Availability & access to culturally competent PC Integrating PC into routine cancer care requires a fundamental shift in thinking and practice.

 Federal legislation Patient-Centered Quality Care for Life Act (HR 1666) Palliative Care & Hospice Education and Training Act (HR 1339/S 641)  State palliative care model legislation  Promoting balance in federal and state pain policies For campaign information: Promoting & Raising Awareness of Palliative Care