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When a person has a life-limiting illness, he or she and the family may contend with emotional, physical, and spiritual challenges that can be all-consuming. In times like these, palliative care is a person-centred and compassionate approach that defines the person as a whole and focuses on comfort, dignity, and quality of life. Palliative care can be delivered in a variety of locations, including home, but also in hospital, hospice, or care home settings, and provides essential support to both individuals and their families.

In this blog, we will look into it, who it is for, the benefits of it, and how trusted services such as Optimum Global Care can help ensure the person gets the best possible care tailored to them.

“Caring about others, running the risk of feeling, and leaving an impact on people, brings happiness.”

What is Palliative Care?

It is a subspeciality of medical care, focused on improving the quality of life for people living with serious or terminal illnesses. It does not only apply in end-of-life situations; it can be given at any stage of the illness in conjunction with curative care. It is to improve quality of life; the person-centred approach works to relieve pain, manage symptoms and provide emotional and psychological care for patients and their families, working alongside multidisciplinary teams. 

This comprehensive approach incorporates a person’s physical needs and mental, emotional, and spiritual well-being. It works with a multidisciplinary team of clinicians that involves medical professionals, such as doctors and nurses, as well as social workers, chaplains and other allied health professionals, to collaborate on meeting individualised plans of care.

Who is Palliative Care for?

People of all ages living with chronic or life-limiting illnesses can access services. This includes people diagnosed with:

  • Cancer
  • Heart failure
  • Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)
  • Kidney failure
  • Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias
  • Parkinson’s disease
  • Motor neurone disease (MND)

While it tends to be associated with end-of-life care, the evidence shows that integrating it early can better support a person living with their illness. People receiving it experienced better symptom control, fewer emergency hospital admissions, and had more control over their care decisions.

Palliative Care Core Elements

What distinguishes it from other approaches to care is its holistic and individualised design.  Below are some of the core elements that define this important piece of care:

  1. Pain and Symptom Management

The very heart of it is the relief of physical discomfort and pain. It focuses on addressing pain and discomfort, including fatigue, breathlessness, nausea, constipation and other distressing symptoms, both with medical and nonmedical interventions.

  1. Mental and Emotional Support

A serious illness can often create emotional upheaval, anxiety and depression. Our teams offer support in the form of counselling, therapy and coping strategies to help individuals and their families cope with these feelings.

  1. Spiritual Support

For many people, a serious illness can prompt their consideration of spirituality. Palliative services can provide support for people’s spiritual and cultural needs, and impact on their beliefs and values, through the course of their care.

  1. Communication and Planning

Having clear and compassionate communication is vital to making sure individuals and their families understand their condition, treatment options and prognosis. Advance care planning is also supported, so individuals can consider in advance and express their wishes related to their future care.

  1. Supports for families and caregivers 

Families have an important role as caregivers for a loved one; families need support, too. Palliative care can have respite care, bereavement support and advice on caregiving responsibilities. 

Why Early Access to Palliative Care is Important?

Accessing it early in the illness can improve quality of life to an even greater degree. Published studies have indicated that people receiving it early in their illness have fewer emergency room visits, reported better satisfaction with care, and, in some cases, improved survival rates. It allows patients to live the best they can for as long as they can, despite their illness.

In addition to this, newly developed plans allow individuals to avoid unwanted medical intervention by ensuring treatments and care align with the individual’s wishes.

Optimum Global Care: A Trusted Company for Palliative Care

At Optimum Global Care, we recognise that it can be complicated and challenging. We use a compassionate approach, and we try to provide individual care that respects the choices and dignity that each individual brings to their situation. We have services that address care needs ranging from pain management to emotional support that are delivered with human warmth, empathy, and professionalism, which is now a hallmark of our services for individuals and families.

We believe that no one should have to face an illness alone. The care professionals here will work in conjunction with the healthcare community and with families in order to maintain seamless, continuous care for the patient in their home or in a residential setting.

How to access palliative care services?

Getting started typically starts with a conversation. Your GP, specialist, or hospital team will refer you to local services. You can also refer to your local services as well as private services.

Before you meet with a team or practitioner, be sure to ask any questions and express any concerns about the care being provided to you or your loved one. The sooner you meet with a team of health professionals who specialise in palliative care, the more they can assist you during your illness with physical, emotional and spiritual care needs.

It is not about abandonment—it is about the choice of comfort, dignity, and quality of life. It is a lifebuoy of support to help patients navigate one of the most uncertain journeys of their lives—and live as well as possible, and not just live.

Palliative care is fundamentally compassionate—coming alongside people where they are at, supporting them with no judgement, and honouring their values along the way.

If you desire compassionate, individualised support, Optimum Global Care is here to provide care with a difference to you and the ones you love.

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