The right to a ‘good death’
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The right to a ‘good death’

Death is certain but access to quality palliative care is not, according to MPs. Daniel Allen reports

Deep in the recent Commons health committee report on palliative care is a telling detail that says much about the obstacles faced by terminally ill people. It comes in a section on communication, which, the report says, is a ‘major problem’ in palliative care. It quotes from a study by a Marie Curie hospice which found that in the course of a two and half year illness, the ‘average’ cancer patient encountered 32 doctors before seeing a specialist palliative care professional.

Nursing Older People. 16, 6, 6-6. doi: 10.7748/nop2004.09.16.6.6.c2323

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