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Projects

Holistic Oncological Palliative Care 4 Europe’s Kids (Hope4Kids)

The Hope4Kids – Holistic Oncologic Palliative Care for Europe’s Kids - Joint Action aims to strengthen and harmonise paediatric palliative care (PPC) across Europe for all children living with life-threatening or life-limiting conditions.   

Across Europe, many children live with severe, complex or rare chronic conditions that significantly affect their quality of life and, in many cases, may shorten life expectancy. PPC is not limited to end-of-life care – it is an active and holistic approach that can be provided from the moment of diagnosis, regardless of disease type or stage, and alongside disease-specific or life-prolonging treatments. The aim of PPC is to prevent and relieve suffering through effective management of pain and other distressing symptoms, as well as to provide psychological, social and spiritual support to children and their families.   

Access to specialised PPC across Europe remains uneven, and care is often integrated late or inadequately into routine paediatric services. As a result, children, their families and informal caregivers frequently experience inconsistent care. Hope4Kids responds to these challenges through a comprehensive and coordinated approach. Key deliverables include mapping of PPC systems across Europe; development of harmonised, evidence-based guidelines in PPC; implementation and evaluation of four pilot interventions across more than 17 study sites; and development of education and training programmes for healthcare professionals, parents and informal caregivers such as teachers. Hope4Kids will also build a European PPC network of professionals and collaborate with other European projects.  

The Hope4Kids project has a duration of 4 years and is coordinated by the Princess Máxima Center for pediatric oncology in the Netherlands. The initiative is built on the cooperation of more than 50 partners and over 70 organisations from 23 European countries. Through this collaboration, Hope4Kids addresses inequalities in access to PPC, quality of care, and integration into health systems. Ultimately, this will ensure that every child and family have timely access to high-quality PPC, regardless of place of residence. 

“Funded by the European Union. Views and opinions expressed are however those of the author(s) only and do not necessarily reflect those of the European Union or the European Health and Digital Executive Agency. Neither the European Union nor the granting authority can be held responsible for them.”

 

Lees hier de Nederlandse beschrijving

De Europese Joint Action Hope4Kids – Holistic Oncologic Palliative Care for Europe’s Kids -heeft als doel de kinderpalliatieve zorg te versterken en te harmoniseren voor alle kinderen in Europa met een levensbedreigende of levensverkortende aandoening. In heel Europa leven veel kinderen met ernstige, complexe of zeldzame chronische aandoeningen die hun levenskwaliteit aanzienlijk beïnvloeden, en in veel gevallen de levensverwachting kunnen verkorten. Kinderpalliatieve zorg beperkt zich niet tot zorg aan het levenseinde – het is een actieve en holistische aanpak die kan worden geboden vanaf het moment van de diagnose, ongeacht het type of stadium van de ziekte, en naast ziektespecifieke of levensverlengende behandelingen. Het doel van kinderpalliatieve zorg is het voorkomen en verlichten van lijden door middel van de effectieve behandeling van pijn en andere verontrustende symptomen, evenals het bieden van psychologische, sociale en spirituele ondersteuning aan kinderen en hun families. De toegang tot gespecialiseerde kinderpalliatieve zorg in Europa is nog steeds ongelijk verdeeld, en deze zorg wordt vaak pas laat of onvoldoende geïntegreerd in de reguliere zorg. Als gevolg hiervan krijgen kinderen, hun families en informele zorgverleners (zoals leerkrachten) vaak te maken met inconsistente zorg. Hope4Kids biedt een antwoord op deze uitdagingen door middel van een alomvattende en gecoördineerde aanpak. Belangrijke doelen zijn onder meer het in kaart brengen van kinderpalliatieve zorgsystemen in heel Europa; de ontwikkeling van geharmoniseerde, evidence-based richtlijnen voor kinderpalliatieve zorg; de implementatie en evaluatie van vier pilots op meer dan 17 onderzoekslocaties; en de ontwikkeling van onderwijs- en trainingsprogramma's voor zorgprofessionals, ouders en informele zorgverleners. Hope4Kids zal ook een Europees netwerk van kinderpalliatieve zorgprofessionals opzetten en samenwerken met andere Europese projecten. Het Hope4Kids-project heeft een looptijd van 4 jaar en wordt gecoördineerd door het Prinses Máxima Centrum voor kinderoncologie. Het initiatief is gebaseerd op de samenwerking van meer dan 50 partners en meer dan 70 organisaties uit 23 Europese landen. Door deze samenwerking pakt Hope4Kids ongelijkheden aan op het gebied van toegang tot kinderpalliatieve zorg, kwaliteit van zorg en integratie in gezondheidszorgstelsels. Uiteindelijk zal dit ervoor zorgen dat elk kind en elke familie tijdige en holistische kinderpalliatieve zorg kan ontvangen, ongeacht waar in Europa zij zich bevinden.

Linkedin

Linkedin: @JA Hope4Kids

Contact

Contact information: wp2@kinderpalliatief.nl

Partners

International Children’s Palliative Care Network (ICPCN)

ICPCN is a global network seeking to improve acces to children’s palliative care. ICPCN’s network includes members in more than 140 countries. Members have access to ICPCN’s newsletter and online resources including educational content in many languages. ICPCN advocates for access and quality of children’s palliative care with the World Health Organization and other global platforms.

ICPCN

European Association for Palliative Care (EAPC)

EAPC is a professional organization “committed to supporting the promotion and development of palliative care throughout Europe and beyond”. Our Center staff frequently attend and present at the EAPC annual conference. In addition they serve in leadership positions and support the administrative work of the EAPC Reference Group for Children and Young People. Our Director, Meggi Schuilling-Otten is currently Chair of the EAPC Reference Group for Children and Young People. This group serves to promote children’s palliative care throughout Europe.

European Association for Palliative Care

Maruzza Foundation

The Maruzza Foundation works to ensure the right to access palliative care for all children who need it. The Maruzza Foundation hosts the Maruzza International Congress in Rome, a major gathering for paediatric palliative care researchers and clinicians.

Maruzza Foundation

Resources

Courageous Parents Network

CPN aims to orient, equip and empower families and others caring for a child with a serious medical condition and provide digital resources and an extensive media library used by families and clinicians.

Center to Advance Palliative Care

The Center to Advance Palliative Care is a US based organization that has supported the growth of palliative care as a specialty clinical service since 1999. Their website offers free resources on pediatric program development, marketing of palliative care, and educational offerings for operations managers and clinicians. Program Development. 

Center to Advance Palliative Care

Childhood Cancer International

CCI is the largest childhood cancer patient support organization, with member organizations in more than 100 countries.

Childhood Cancer International

Together for Short Lives (TFSL)

TFSL is a UK based organization that provides family support (emotional and financial), advocates for children’s palliative care in the UK, and providers resources to clinicians working with children who have life-limiting illnesses. TFSL also hosts an online provider network where clinicians can share expertise with one another.

Research Resources

International News

Project End of Life in Place: choice & diversity in end-of-life care paths

Discover the journeys of two researchers dedicated to improving children's palliative care worldwide.


An Interview with Sara Pinto (Postdoctoral Researcher) and Dorothy Olet (PhD Fellow) about the Project End of Life in Place

Conducted by Julia Downing (Chief Executive Officer at International Children's Palliative Care Network). More about the project.

Sara and Dorothy, firstly can you both tell me about your background and your interest in children’s palliative care.  

Sara: I'm a nurse currently working in Portugal as a Professor of Nursing in Porto. I’ve worked as a nurse in the vascular surgery wards and met many people with advanced chronic diseases, often at the end of life. I recognised that I needed to develop my expertise in this area, to gain knowledge about dealing with suffering, death and dying. I signed up for a master's degree in palliative care. Later on as part of my PhD, I looked at the concept of comfort as a nursing intervention. Another reason that I’m interested in CPC is a personal one.  As a young child, my older sister passed away when she was 16 years old. I was four at that time. It was a big thing and perhaps because of that I've always had a particular interest in issues related to suffering, finding meaning in life and spiritual care. 

Dorothy: I’m a researcher in Uganda and a lecturer at the Institute of Hospice and Palliative Care in Africa. I hold a first degree in medicine, a master's in public health and a master's in palliative care. My research interests are in improving the quality of life of patients with palliative care needs, especially children.  I have also had a personal interest in palliative care since 2003, when my mother became ill and also when my nephew, who was then about four years old, had leukaemia and needed palliative care. So this ignited my passion for palliative care, especially for paediatric palliative care. 

Can you tell me a bit about the End of Life in Place project?

It is an international project funded by the European Research Council. It's led by the University of Coimbra in Portugal and is being conducted in four countries - Portugal, Netherlands, Uganda and USA.  It is co-ordinated by Dr. Barbara Gomes and we’re looking to better understand the places where people, including children, are cared for at the end of life and aims to design and test the first international classification of places of death.

What are your roles in the project?

Sara: My collaboration with the project started in 2022 as a post doctoral research student. I conducted an umbrella review of the evidence on the preferences about time and place of end of life care and death, including the perspectives of children and their parents. I continue to be involved in other components of the project as an external research collaborator.

Dorothy: My role in the project started in January 2023. I work as an invited assistant investigator at the Faculty of Medicine at the University of Coimbra undertaking my PhD at NOVA School of Public Health. The focus of my PhD dissertation will be on diversity of end of life pathways among children with life- threatening conditions. So I'm looking at the paediatric component of the project and also participating in other project activities as we are looking at the international classification of place of death. 

Sara, can you tell us about your literature review?

We identified 15 systematic reviews covering 309 studies conducted in the last 50 years, mostly in European and North American countries. This study was looking at both adults and children with different health conditions, cancer and non-cancer and their family caregivers. We found that most patients prefer to be, and to die, at home because of the presence of family, more autonomy, more sense of dignity, and most family members also prefer this. However, it's important to highlight that sometimes homecare is challenging and hospitals, hospices and other palliative care facilities were also considered as preferred places. Regarding factors and changes over time, people's preferences are influenced by several factors, such as their illness, personal reasons, the environment around them, but we still know relatively little about whether people, including children, change their preferences as their health gets worse. 

We also looked at how often preferences for place of care of death were met. Research varies on this. We saw that there was higher congruence in studies since 2004, and that non-cancer patients were less likely to have their preferences met. Only two reviews focused on paediatric patients and both were of low quality. There was no data related to place of care preferences for children and just one low quality study that looked at preference for place of death. Most study participants were parents reporting on the preference of their children as proxies and family perspectives were captured only as qualitative data. The findings show that some families preferred a hospital death for their child, particularly during the last month of life, and some reported that they had bad memories associated with home. There is an important study conducted with 40 adolescents with HIV in the United States, published in 2010, which showed that 60% of these adolescents preferred to die at home, around 5% preferred to die in a hospice, and about 15% in the hospital. And, curiously, 20% had no preference. 

There is a paucity of studies that ask children about end of life.  International studies emphasise the complex issues, not only for ethical issues, but also the lack of funding for clinicians to do this kind of research and the issue of parent gatekeeping. We hope that our findings could be a crucial starting point to address these gaps. 

It's a big project with several work packages. Which other elements of the project are you working on that relate to children and young people? 

Dorothy: I'm currently working on a study looking at diversity in place of death among children internationally, specifically looking at examining diversity in place of death among children with life-threatening conditions. There are some preliminary results, which show that the majority of children, about 70%, died in hospital and health institutions, and about 12.5% in homes.  About 11% of places of death are ill defined. The project will provide a comparison of end of life care pathways for children with life-threatening conditions in Portugal, Netherlands, Uganda and USA and will explore the factors associated with undesired transitions among children with life-threatening conditions in these four countries. This is something for us to look forward to understanding more about.

Sara: I am collaborating in a document analysis to explore the extent to which health policy and strategic documents for palliative care refer to preferred places of care and death, for patients and families, including children. We hope that our work will provide more people with the opportunity to discuss and express their preferences and to improve future services for children and their families.


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