The quality of life, comfort, and resiliency of seriously ill patients and their families are all improved by palliative care. Patients who are seriously sick have life-threatening illnesses, such as cancer, organ failure, or dementia, which negatively influence
their daily lives or cause significant stress for their caregivers.

An interdisciplinary team of doctors, nurses, social workers, and chaplains provide palliative care services to identify and treat the medical, psychological, social, and spiritual stressors related to serious diseases. Primary care doctors, heart or cancer specialists,
palliative care professionals, home health agencies, private businesses, and
healthcare institutions can all offer it.

 Who can benefit from palliative care?

All patients with serious illnesses, regardless of age, prognosis, disease stage, or preferred course of treatment, have access to palliative care services. It should ideally be given early in the illness and continue
with any curative or life-extending therapy. In other words, patients can
receive both palliative care and treatment for their condition; they are not
required to choose between them.

Palliative, Dementia and alzheimer care can help patients live longer and enhance the quality of life for the patient and their families by lowering emotional and physical anguish and discomfort. The increased quality of life, proper administration of
disease-specific medications, and early referral to hospice for intensive
symptom management and stabilization are the causes of prolonged survival.

What benefits does palliative care provide?

Some believe that they are a cure, have no benefit, and involve opiate abuse. There are many myths about palliative personal care that, even today, continue to spread by word of mouth. These beliefs
demonstrate a lack of knowledge of this care branch and underestimate the work
that all kinds of health professionals carry out daily, from doctors and nurses
to psychologists and physiotherapists. Palliative care services are the best
choice.

To combat them and begin to expand the resource and access to palliative care at home, want to emphasize the benefits they bring to both patients and their families:

Specialized and personalized attention

 Terminal, chronic, or long-standing illnesses may or may not have a cure. But it is not the goal of palliative care. In this sense, the professionals who treat patients must be trained in a specific branch of medicine to relieve pain and symptoms, not eliminate evil.

Early start

The sooner palliative care treatment is started, the better quality of life for the patient and his family until the end of his days.

Comfort and well-being in the face of disease

This is the main objective, and the team of professionals in charge of each patient directs all its actions.

Full access to the necessary resources

Especially when treatment is carried out at home, palliative care combines all the available tools to achieve maximum well-being for patients beyond the disease.

Emotional Support

Any health problem has connotations that go far beyond physical discomfort. In terminal or chronic illnesses, psychological and spiritual accompaniment for the patient and their loved ones is essential. And palliative care provides it without hesitation.

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