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Contact information: wp2@kinderpalliatief.nl

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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

Use the guideline to look critically at your own work

Rigorously looked at evidence.


This blog was written by Erna Michiels, Pediatric Oncologist and Palliative Care Specialist at Princess Máxima Center for Pediatric Oncology (the Netherlands).

Last November, the revised guideline in Palliative Care for Children was published in the Netherlands. This guideline provides professionals, parents and carers with tools and a reference guide to further improve care of children with a life-limiting or life-threatening illness and their families. The document has now also been (partly) translated into English. There are many countries where palliative care for children is still more in its infant phase, compared to the Netherlands. And so Erna Michiels, paediatric oncologist at the “Prinses Máxima Centre” (Netherlands), hopes that colleagues from other countries will use this guideline.

The guideline was developed through close cooperation between healthcare professionals, researchers and parents. All knowledge has been gathered and compiled focusing on the following topics;  Symptoms, Decision-making, Communication and Organization of care. These chapters and subchapters describe what works and what does not work in children’s palliative care. In Europe, this guideline is an important basis document. Paediatricians, anywhere in Europe, can use the guideline with the question: 'What do we do? What does the guideline say? And what do we think the best option for this child is?" The guideline helps you to look critically at your own actions.

Rigorously looked at evidence

What I love is that the revision rigorously looked at evidence. This is special and important, because it is the only way we can take children’s palliative care to the next level. There are many motivated professionals working in Europe who all want the best for the child and family. I think that the vast majority provides children’s palliative care the way I also learned it, namely from own experience and that of colleagues. However, that is not the same as evidence-based medicine. Evidence-based medicine involves questions like, "Do we have evidence that something is effective? And how good is the quality of that evidence?"

Even when there is no good evidence available, the guideline formulates a recommendation. These recommendations are also substantiated: 60 children’s palliative care stakeholders were brought together to gather input on what is the best way forward. The recommendations are of course not unimpeachable, but they are well-founded. And you have to realize that all countries are different and unique. This is something we have to take into account, for example when it comes to shared decision making. In some countries and cultures people really don't talk about death. In the Netherlands, we do. Also, one child may be very different from another child. This is something to keep in mind when looking at the recommendations. Hopefully, the guideline will help professionals to scrutinize their own standards.

The guideline - in addition to shared decision making - addresses other issues, such as Advance Care Planning, grief and aftercare. It is a document that could help and enhance similar interventions in the field of children’s palliative care.

Interested in the guideline's recommendations?

Please contact Erna Michiels, e.michiels@prinsesmaximacentrum.nl

* Photo taken by Martin Hols.


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