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Ambitions for Palliative and End of Life Care

Ambitions for Palliative and End of life care : A national framework for local action 2015-2020. National Palliative and End of life care Partnership 2. Ambitions for Palliative and End of life care National Palliative and End of life care Partnership Association for Palliative Medicine Association of Ambulance Chief Executives Association of Directors of Adult Social Services Association of Palliative care Social Workers care Quality Commission College of Health care Chaplains General Medical Council Health Education England Hospice UK.

life care, based on our collective experience and the analysis of the many reviews and reports in this area, and present a framework for local action. Such action must be focused around the individual and those important to them, so it has to be locally led

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Transcription of Ambitions for Palliative and End of Life Care

1 Ambitions for Palliative and End of life care : A national framework for local action 2015-2020. National Palliative and End of life care Partnership 2. Ambitions for Palliative and End of life care National Palliative and End of life care Partnership Association for Palliative Medicine Association of Ambulance Chief Executives Association of Directors of Adult Social Services Association of Palliative care Social Workers care Quality Commission College of Health care Chaplains General Medical Council Health Education England Hospice UK.

2 Macmillan Cancer Support Marie Curie Motor Neurone Disease Association National Bereavement Alliance National care Forum National Council for Palliative care National Palliative care Nurse Consultants Group National Voices NHS England NHS Improving Quality Patients Association Public Health England Royal College of General Practitioners Royal College of Nursing Royal College of Physicians Social care Institute for Excellence Sue Ryder Together for Short Lives 3. Ambitions for Palliative and End of life care Foreword How we care for the dying is an indicator of how we care for all sick and vulnerable people.

3 (National End of life care Strategy 2008). Death and dying are inevitable. Palliative and end of life care must be a priority. The quality and accessibility of this care will affect all of us and it must be made consistently better for all of us. The needs of people of all ages who are living with dying, death and bereavement, their families, carers and communities must be addressed, taking into account their priorities, preferences and wishes. As people, professionals and local leaders within the health and social care system and our communities, we must commit to these Ambitions and to the framework that will enable their delivery.

4 This framework is not a new strategy. It builds on the 2008. Strategy for End of life care and the improvements that have followed, but much more needs to be done. That Strategy was developed in a different world and a different NHS. to the one that exists now. Today, the emphasis is on local decision-making and delivery, so this document provides a national framework for local action . Constrained resources and increasing demands put all those who use, work in, and lead local organisations under an obligation to create new ways to build more effective systems of care , putting existing resources to more creative and effective use, aligning with wider changes flowing from the NHS Five Year Forward View.

5 We need a collective response. The will, determination and innovation of organisations working collaboratively to find new ways of delivering better care will, and must, make a difference. The essential challenge is to learn how to work together, collectively and differently to achieve these Ambitions and the standard set out in the NICE Quality Standard for End of life care (2011). It is up to us. Engaging with the task, sharing good practice, using what we know and being prepared to learn what we haven't yet understood.

6 Palliative and end of life care requires collaboration and cooperation to create the improvements we all want. This is the approach we have used in our own new Partnership of organisations representing health and social care , statutory and voluntary bodies, and people with personal and professional experience, speaking with one voice. Health and social care are equal partners in this endeavour. Cross-organisational collaboration is vital to design new ways of working that will enable each community to achieve these ends.

7 These systems must reach out beyond the usual networks of organisations and communities to call upon contributions, ideas and actions from a wider spectrum of people. We need integrated health and social care systems that work with people, as well as for people. 4. Ambitions for Palliative and End of life care We live in a world where improvement no longer comes about as a consequence of central direction. It is local leadership, in all that local leaders do, say and exemplify, that is vital to finding new ways of organising care and support for people.

8 We specifically require local professionals and local leaders to act. We expect you to designate a local lead, whether this is the Health and Wellbeing Board, Clinical Commissioning Group, Local Authority or some composite of these. The job is to lead and coordinate a process for working towards these Ambitions , a process that is open, transparent and effective. As a Partnership we are committed to act, help and support, both as individual organisations and by working together. This is the start of our collective engagement to turn Ambitions that should by now have been standard, into a reality for all.

9 Our leadership, engagement and will, within and beyond the Partnership, are the most important mechanisms for change. They will all be needed if we are to create the care that we ourselves desire and should feel obligated to create for everybody. Professor Bee Wee Dr Jane Collins John Powell National Clinical Director for Chief Executive, Marie Curie Policy Lead for End of life care End of life care , NHS England Association of Directors of Adult Social Services 5. Ambitions for Palliative and End of life care Introduction In 2008 the first national strategy for end of life care in England galvanised the health and social care system with three key insights1: that people didn't die in their place of choice; that we needed to prepare for larger numbers of dying people and that not everybody received high-quality care .

10 Some people experience excellent care in hospitals; hospices; care homes and in their own homes. But the reality is that many do not'. Since then other nation specific strategies and reports have followed. These have encompassed all ages, all four nations and all conditions2, 3, 4. New care processes have been developed5. New indicators of quality have been set6. New systems for scrutiny have been devised7. New systems for funding are under development8. Investment and innovation has led to significant progress particularly in reversing the long term increase in the numbers dying in hospital9.


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