Changes needed to boost end-of-life care in Canada, ranked 18th in world: doctors
TORONTO — Canada needs to broaden its approach to palliative care to provide support to patients with serious chronic illnesses, not just those with cancer, suggests a group of doctors who deal with end-of-life care.
Writing in Monday’s edition of the Canadian Medical Association Journal, the specialists suggest major changes are needed to improve access to palliative care, especially for patients with such conditions as end-stage heart failure and chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD.
Canada is ranked 18th out of 80 countries worldwide by the Economist Intelligence Unit for provision of palliative care, even lagging behind Mongolia and Panama in strategies to develop and promote such services to patients, the authors write.
“We ought to be doing better and can be doing better,” co-author Dr. Graeme Rocker, a respirologist at Dalhousie University, said in an interview from Halifax. “And it wouldn’t take a seismic change for us to achieve a higher level.


