Formation | 2008 [1] |
---|---|
Type | Implementing NGO [1] |
Headquarters | London, [2] United Kingdom [1] |
Membership | Over 200 affiliate organizations [1] representing over 90 countries [3] |
Key people |
|
Staff | 25 [1] |
The Worldwide Hospice Palliative Care Alliance or WHPCA (formerly known as the Worldwide Palliative Care Alliance or WPCA) is an international non-governmental organization based in the United Kingdom. In affiliation with the World Health Organization (WHO), the WHPCA works in conjunction with over 200 regional institutions and national partners for the global development of palliative care and advancement of pain relief. It advocates for changes in public policy on accessibility of pain relief in end-of-life care and integration of palliative care into national health agendas. [1] [5]
The WHPCA was founded in 2008 with its headquarters located in the United Kingdom. [1] Clinical health psychologist and co-founder Stephen Connor serves as the executive director. [3] WHPCA is an implementing NGO affiliated with the World Health Organization (WHO) promoting change in public policies for hospice and palliative care on a global, national, and regional scale. [1] The organization has also been accepted as an affiliate NGO of the United Nations Economic and Social Council. [6] It works in conjunction with other international organizations and national entities, such as the African Palliative Care Association (APCA) when the Uganda Ministry of Health hosted an international palliative care conference in 2016. [7] WHPCA has partnered with organizations such as the Centre for Palliative Care in Bangladesh (established by the Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University in 2011) to improve the quality of end-of-life care for elderly and pediatric patients suffering from terminal diseases. [8]
Along with its international partners, the WHPCA seeks to provide pain relief to patients suffering chronic illnesses. The organization works to eliminate the stigma surrounding pain relief by challenging certain national public policies, especially in developing countries where prescribed opioid use is controversial due to drug addiction. [9] One of the other major priorities of the organization is to make quality palliative care more affordable. [6] It has also managed the annual World Hospice and Palliative Care Day to raise global awareness about its initiatives. [6]
In 2014 the WHPCA and WHO produced a joint publication, the Global Atlas of Palliative Care at the End of Life, edited by Stephen Connor and Maria Cecilia Sepulveda Bermedo, a senior adviser on chronic diseases prevention and management for the WHO. [5] It was initiated as part of the WHO's Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases for 2013—2020. The study found that roughly 20 million people around the globe, 6% of whom were children, required end-of-life palliative care, with a majority of those in developing countries lacking basic necessities such as opioid medication for pain relief. [5]
Formation | 2008 [1] |
---|---|
Type | Implementing NGO [1] |
Headquarters | London, [2] United Kingdom [1] |
Membership | Over 200 affiliate organizations [1] representing over 90 countries [3] |
Key people |
|
Staff | 25 [1] |
The Worldwide Hospice Palliative Care Alliance or WHPCA (formerly known as the Worldwide Palliative Care Alliance or WPCA) is an international non-governmental organization based in the United Kingdom. In affiliation with the World Health Organization (WHO), the WHPCA works in conjunction with over 200 regional institutions and national partners for the global development of palliative care and advancement of pain relief. It advocates for changes in public policy on accessibility of pain relief in end-of-life care and integration of palliative care into national health agendas. [1] [5]
The WHPCA was founded in 2008 with its headquarters located in the United Kingdom. [1] Clinical health psychologist and co-founder Stephen Connor serves as the executive director. [3] WHPCA is an implementing NGO affiliated with the World Health Organization (WHO) promoting change in public policies for hospice and palliative care on a global, national, and regional scale. [1] The organization has also been accepted as an affiliate NGO of the United Nations Economic and Social Council. [6] It works in conjunction with other international organizations and national entities, such as the African Palliative Care Association (APCA) when the Uganda Ministry of Health hosted an international palliative care conference in 2016. [7] WHPCA has partnered with organizations such as the Centre for Palliative Care in Bangladesh (established by the Bangabandhu Sheikh Mujib Medical University in 2011) to improve the quality of end-of-life care for elderly and pediatric patients suffering from terminal diseases. [8]
Along with its international partners, the WHPCA seeks to provide pain relief to patients suffering chronic illnesses. The organization works to eliminate the stigma surrounding pain relief by challenging certain national public policies, especially in developing countries where prescribed opioid use is controversial due to drug addiction. [9] One of the other major priorities of the organization is to make quality palliative care more affordable. [6] It has also managed the annual World Hospice and Palliative Care Day to raise global awareness about its initiatives. [6]
In 2014 the WHPCA and WHO produced a joint publication, the Global Atlas of Palliative Care at the End of Life, edited by Stephen Connor and Maria Cecilia Sepulveda Bermedo, a senior adviser on chronic diseases prevention and management for the WHO. [5] It was initiated as part of the WHO's Global Action Plan for the Prevention and Control of Noncommunicable Diseases for 2013—2020. The study found that roughly 20 million people around the globe, 6% of whom were children, required end-of-life palliative care, with a majority of those in developing countries lacking basic necessities such as opioid medication for pain relief. [5]