-
Recent Posts
- Leaders, advocates and voices for change: a message about future nurse leaders.
- Comics in Palliative Care: helpful or too confrontational?
- Integrated Palliative Rehabilitation: ‘The problem is still the word palliative’- Palliative Medicine’s Paper of the Year Award.
- EAPC World Congress 2023 – submit your abstracts now!
- Palliative Care and household poverty reduction: an interview with #EAPC2022 award winner Dr Jane Bates.
Archives
Categories
- ABSTRACT WATCH
- Advance care planning
- ADVOCACY & POLICY
- BEREAVEMENT
- CHILDREN'S PALLIATIVE CARE
- EAPC ACTIVITIES
- EAPC COLLABORATIVE PROJECTS
- ACTION
- ATOME
- DIAdIC: Dyadic Psychosocial Interventions for people with Advanced cancer and their Informal Caregivers
- EAPC Research Network (RN)
- EURO-IMPACT
- European Palliative Care Academy
- IMPACT
- InSup-C (integrated palliative care)
- MyPal Consortium
- NurseEduPal
- PACE
- Palliative Sedation Horizon2020
- RESPACC
- EAPC-LINKED JOURNALS
- EDUCATION & TRAINING
- INTERVIEWS & TRIBUTES
- NATIONAL & INTERNATIONAL REPORTS
- PALLIATIVE CARE IN HUMANITARIAN CRISES
- PATIENT & FAMILY CARE
- POSTS IN OTHER LANGUAGES
- RESEARCH
- SOCIAL MEDIA
- SPIRITUAL CARE
- Uncategorized
- VOLUNTEERING IN PALLIATIVE CARE
Follow Us
Follow Us
Follow Us
Follow Us
Links
Category Archives: PALLIATIVE CARE IN HUMANITARIAN CRISES
Global Palliative Care Community Statement on the Humanitarian Crisis in Ukraine
As a global palliative care community, we are deeply concerned about the humanitarian crisis in Ukraine and its devastating impacts on families, children and vulnerable populations with serious pre-existing medical conditions. We call upon all humanitarian actors and donors to … Continue reading
Humanity until infinity…
At the end of last year, we published a series about palliative care in the context of humanitarian crises. Contributors looked at the implications of providing palliative care for migrants, refugees and people who have fled war-torn countries and places … Continue reading
The role of the humanitarian sector in delivering palliative care in conflict settings
At the end of last year, we published a series about palliative care in the context of humanitarian crises. Contributors looked at the implications of providing palliative care for migrants, refugees and people who have fled war-torn countries and places … Continue reading
Palliative care as a basic healthcare right: A new consensus within the humanitarian community
Continuing our new series about palliative care in the context of humanitarian crises where we shall look at the implications of providing palliative care for migrants, refugees and people who have fled war-torn countries and places of conflict and how … Continue reading
Developing EAPC guidance on palliative care for refugees and migrants
Continuing our new series about palliative care in the context of humanitarian crises where we shall look at the implications of providing palliative care for migrants, refugees and people who have fled war-torn countries and places of conflict and how … Continue reading