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For Immediate Release
November 3, 2003
Contact:
Kathryn Cervino
212-822-7285
Alison Cohen
617-618-2109
acohen@edc.org
Hundreds to Attend State-of-the-Art National Symposium on Improving Health Care for Children with Life-Threatening Conditions
NEW YORK, NY – In a first-of-its
kind national conference, health care professionals from across the country
and parents of children with life-threatening conditions will gather at The New York
Academy of Medicine on November 6th and 7th to discuss ways to improve
care for children who are seriously ill.
The symposium, Enhancing Family-Centered Care for
Children Living with Life-Threatening Conditions, is sponsored
by the Initiative for Pediatric Palliative Care (IPPC),
a collaboration of Education Development Center,
Inc. (EDC), The New York Academy
of Medicine, the National Association of Children’s Hospitals and Related
Institutions, the Society of Pediatric Nurses, and the Association of Medical
School Pediatric Department Chairs as well as seven leading children’s
hospitals. The symposium will include sessions on such topics as pain management,
grief and bereavement, and communication around end-of-life care for children.
In several sessions, parents of children who have died or who currently have
chronic illnesses will share their perspectives with medical educators, ethicists
and practitioners.
“These are devastating points in the lives of these children and
their families,” said
Alan R. Fleischman, M.D., Senior Vice President for Medical and Academic
Affairs at the Academy. “We need to provide these children with
pain management, symptom management and emotional support, and we need
to help their extended
families.”
“For the last decade or more, there has been considerable attention given
to the end-of-life care needs of adults in the United States,” said Mildred
Z. Solomon, IPPC principal investigator. “It’s been nearly taboo
to acknowledge that children also face, and sometimes succumb to, life-threatening
conditions.”
As part of the symposium, IPPC will introduce a curriculum and video
series designed to help children’s hospitals and similar institutions develop effective
interdisciplinary teams of doctors, nurses, social workers, chaplains and allied
health care professionals. The peer-reviewed curriculum, which IPPC has developed
and pilot-tested over the last two years, consists of facilitator’s guides
(free and downloadable online at www.ippcweb.org),
case studies, and video interviews with families who have lost children
or who are caring for seriously ill children.
The symposium will kick off a series of training sessions around the
country designed to help children’s hospitals implement a team
approach to pediatric palliative care. More than 50,000 children die
each year in the U.S., and 80
percent of them die in hospitals. “The nation’s children’s
hospitals are often the main providers of care for poor, underserved
children from a wide variety of cultural and religious backgrounds,” says
EDC’s David Browning, director of the IPPC initiative. “This
conference, and the IPPC initiative more broadly, aim to ensure that
the voices of these children and their families are heard and responded
to effectively.”
For more information, visit the National
Symposium Web site.
The New York Academy of Medicine is a non-profit institution founded
in 1847 that is dedicated to enhancing the health of the public through
research education and advocacy with a particular focus on urban populations,
especially the disadvantaged.
In addition to the IPPC collaborating organizations, the symposium
is being sponsored by the Institute for Johns Hopkins Nursing, the American
Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine, and the Hospice and Palliative
Nurses Association.
IPPC’s funders include The
Nathan Cummings Foundation, the Project on Death in America, and an anonymous
family foundation. In addition,
the symposium has received support from the National Institute of Child
Health and Human Development, GlaxoSmithKline, and the National Association
of Children’s Hospitals and Related Institutions.
Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC) is one of the world’s leading nonprofit education and health organizations, with 325 projects in 50 countries. EDC brings researchers and practitioners together to advance learning and healthy development for individuals of all ages and institutions of all types. For more information, visit www.edc.org.
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