Call for Abstract
Scientific Program
6th World congress on Hospice and Palliative care, will be organized around the theme “Making Palliative care better”
Hospice 2019 is comprised of 26 tracks and 99 sessions designed to offer comprehensive sessions that address current issues in Hospice 2019.
Submit your abstract to any of the mentioned tracks. All related abstracts are accepted.
Register now for the conference by choosing an appropriate package suitable to you.
Hospice and Palliative Care is the active, expert and gentle care and support of individuals living with a serious, progressive illness when cure is not expected. This is the holistic in nature – caring for the ‘’whole’’ person and their family. The aims of hospice and palliative care is to support and improve quality of life for those in the last stage of living, and their families. This offers social, emotional and spiritual support to individuals and families through members of an interdisciplinary team including physicians, nurses, social workers, home care nursing, home support, Hospice staff and volunteers, and other disciplines. Palliative care may be offered for people with illnesses, such as like: Cancer, Heart disease, Lung diseases, Kidney failure, Dementia, HIV/AIDS, ALS (amyotrophic lateral sclerosis) etc.
- Track 1-1 Palliative Care and Medicare
- Track 1-2 Palliative Care and Respite care
- Track 1-3 Hospice family care
- Track 1-4 Hospice compass
- Track 1-5Systemic effects of terminal diseases
- Track 1-6Palliative care health care Symptom control
- Track 1-7Systemic effects of terminal diseases
- Track 1-8Palliative care emergencies
Geriatrics is a specialty that focuses on health care of elderly people. It aims to promote health by preventing and treating diseases and disabilities in older adults. There is no set age at which patients may be under the care of a geriatrician or geriatric physician, a physician who specializes in the care of elderly people. Rather, this decision is determined by the individual patient's needs, and the availability of a specialist. Geriatrics differs from standard adult medicine because it focuses on the unique needs of the elderly person. The aged body is different physiologically from the younger adult body, and during old age, the decline of various organ systems becomes manifest. Previous health issues and lifestyle choices produce a different constellation of diseases and symptoms in different people.
- Track 2-1 Palliative Care and End of Life Care
- Track 2-2 Palliative Care and Terminal Care
- Track 2-3 Palliative Care and Foster Care
- Track 2-4palliative care for elderly with dementia
Palliative care professionals say the problems that lead to supported dying requests can usually be dealt with in ways that do not accelerate death. They promote quality of life and reject the idea of “dying on demand”. Supporters of aided dying, argue that palliative care cannot be effective in every case. To them, the important thing is to respect independence and self-determination of choice.
- Track 3-1Palliative Care and Hospital-Based Care
- Track 3-2 Palliative Care and Home Care
- Track 3-3 Palliative Care and Long Term Care
Palliative care that improves the quality of life and quality of care for patients with life threatening or life-limiting sickness and their families through the prevention and relief of suffering, communication about goals of care, and early identification and assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual.
End-of-life care is care taking place in the last part of a patient’s life, typically in the last few months, depending on the primary diagnosis and clinical course and includes planning for end-of-life care.
- Track 4-1 Bereavement support
- Track 4-2 Behavioral Health
- Track 4-3 Hospice nursing
Palliative care plays an important role to manage the multiple symptoms commonly experienced by the chronically ill or dying patients remains a primary goal of Palliative care nursing. There are so many ongoing clinical assessment, reassessing pain and medication side effects, developing pain management expertise and advocating for change if the patients does not get relief from the prescribed regimen.
- Track 5-1 Palliative Care and Alimentary Symptoms
- Track 5-2 Palliative Care and Alimentary Symptoms
- Track 5-3 Kidney/Renal Failure
Palliative care and Rehabilitation medicine share many common goals. They strive to maximize physical function and emotional well-being to the highest extent possible given the nature of the underlying disease process. Many patients with End-Stage disease experience symptoms and functional losses that diminish their quality of life.
- Track 6-1 End stage disease
- Track 6-2 Recreational therapy
- Track 6-3 Preventive rehabilitation
Occupational therapy practitioners play an important role on palliative and hospice care teams by identifying life roles and activities (“occupations”) that are meaningful to patients and addressing barriers to performing these activities. Unlike other health care providers, they consider both the physical and psychosocial/ behavioral health needs of the patient, focusing on what is most important to him or her to accomplish, the available resources and support systems, and the environments in which the patients want and can participate.
- Track 7-1 Activities of Daily Living (ADLs)
- Track 7-2 Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs)
- Track 7-3 Leisure Participation
- Track 7-4 Psychosocial/Behavioral Health
Spiritual care is an essential domain of palliative care, which focuses on the needs of the whole person and their family. Spirituality is a fundamental element of human experience. It includes the character’s search for meaning and determination in life and the experience of the superior. For some people spirituality can be largely faith based, for others it may be their relationship with nature or the profound connections they have with their people. Spirituality may or may not involve devout opinions.
- Track 8-1 Palliative Care and Spiritual Care Interventions
- Track 8-2 Spiritual distress and existential suffering
- Track 8-3 Spiritual wellbeing and quality of life
Emergency medicine has progressively taken a central role in the early execution of palliative care. Patients with a serious disease are likely to find themselves in an emergency section at some point along their course of illness, and they should expect to receive high-quality palliative care in that setting. Common integration of palliative care into the day-to-day practice of emergency medicine, however, is often exposed by the demands of many competing priorities.
- Track 9-1 Uncontrolled Symptoms
- Track 9-2 Increasingly Complicated
- Track 9-3 Functional Decline
‘’Nursing is primarily assisting the individual in the performance of those activities contributing to health and its recovery, or to a peaceful death’’ Virginia’s definition of Nursing. The role of Nursing in palliative care is to provide relief for physical symptoms, achieving quality of life, maintaining an independent patient, relief for mental anguish and social isolation, family support, reducing isolation, fear and anxiety and good death or dying well.
- Track 10-1 Physical Aspects of Care
- Track 10-2 Ethical and Legal Aspects of Care
- Track 10-3 Structures and Processes of Care
- Track 10-4 Cultural Aspects of Care
Pediatric Palliative care is specific medical care for children with serious sicknesses. Its attentions on providing relief from the symptoms, pain, and stress of a serious illness’s diagnosis of any kind. The aim is to progress in superiority of life for both the child and the family.
Crew of doctors, nurses and other specialists generally provide the Pediatric Palliative care who works with a child’s other doctors as an additional deposit of support. It is suitable at any age and at any stage of sickness and can be provided laterally with treatment meant to cure.
- Track 11-1 assessment and management of pain and symptoms
- Track 11-2 emotional and spiritual needs
- Track 11-3 Bereavement care
- Track 11-4 Advance care planning
Oncology deals to the patient of cancer for medically treatment. The patients suffered so much by the medical treatment from side effects and emotional issues. Palliative care provides professional treatment and provide the treatment against the symptoms, their side effects, and emotional problems. Palliative care pushes upward to provide mentally fit.
- Track 12-1Practical aspects of supportive palliative care
- Track 12-2 The extremes of supportive care
- Track 12-3 Early palliative care
- Track 12-4 Supportive care as a comprehensive approach
Palliative care is a special type of medical care that focuses on treatment of symptoms people may have when they are living with a chronic (longstanding) illness, such as cancer or heart failure. It is often compared to the hospice care that is offered to terminally ill people. In palliative care, the goal is to provide the best quality of life possible even if someone is not terminally ill.
- Track 13-1 Pain in palliative care
- Track 13-2 Pain assessment in palliative care
- Track 13-3 Identifying the sources
- Track 13-4 Pain perception
Palliative care can address a broad range of issues, integrating an individual’s specific needs into care. The physical and emotional effects of cancer and its treatment may be very different from person to person. For example, differences in age, cultural background, or support systems may result in very different palliative care needs.
- Track 14-1 Affirms life and regards death as a normal process.
- Track 14-2 Does not hasten or postpone death.
- Track 14-3 Provides relief from pain and other symptoms.
- Track 14-4 Integrates psychological and spiritual care
Chronic illnesses are marked by fluctuations and variations over time. Individuals with chronic illness experience pain and other symptoms that are not always adequately managed. Their caregivers often must deal with enormous burden as the illness progresses. Palliative care can serve as an intervention to manage chronic illness, not just at the end of life but also in the early phases of illness.
- Track 15-1Care focus on cure
- Track 15-2Care focus on maximum life
- Track 15-3Palliative care and Perideath care
- Track 15-4Care focus on maximizing comfort and quality of life
- Track 15-5Diagnosis
Heart Disease identifies the need for patients with heart failure to have access to palliative care services for on-going support and advice; and for Renal Services goes further, listing as a quality requirement for patients near the end of life to have ‘a jointly agreed palliative care plan, built around their individual needs and preferences'.
- Track 16-1CHRONIC LUNG DISEASE
- Track 16-2END-STAGE RENAL DISEASE
- Track 16-3CHRONIC HEART FAILURE
Palliative care psychiatry focuses on the emotional and social issues that arise in someone with an advanced illness, often in someone who is receiving hospice or palliative care (hospice being one end of the palliative care spectrum, which offers enhanced palliative care to patients with a short prognosis).
- Track 17-1Major depressive disorder
Nutrition in palliative care and at the end of life should be one of the goals for improving quality of life. It is important to address issues of food and feeding currently to assist in the management of troublesome symptoms as well as to enhance the remaining life. Cancer and its treatments exert a major impact upon physical and psychological reserves and at the end of life problems with appetite and the ability to eat and drink compound such impact.
- Track 18-1Altered food intake
- Track 18-2Symptoms
Palliative care is a philosophy and a way of caring that aims to enhance the quality of life of patients and their families facing problems associated with life-threatening illnesses. The objective of palliative care is the prevention and relief of suffering by symptom control by integrating the Health Sciences with the Humanities.
- Track 19-1Cross-cultural Issues at the End of Life
- Track 19-2Professionalism and Physicians Facing Death
- Track 19-3Pain, Suffering, and the Withdrawal of Life-sustaining Therapy
- Track 19-4Palliative care and Organ donation ethics
- Track 19-5Palliative care and Research ethics
Health care or healthcare is the maintenance or improvement of health via the diagnosis, treatment, and prevention of disease, illness, injury, and other physical and mental impairments in human beings. Health care is delivered by health professionals (providers or practitioners) in allied health professions, chiropractic, dentistry, midwifery, nursing, medicine, optometry, pharmacy, psychology, and other health professions. It includes the work done in providing primary care, secondary care, and tertiary care, as well as in public health.
- Track 20-1Palliative care for children
- Track 20-2Inpatient palliative care team
- Track 20-3Use of specialist palliative care services
- Track 20-4Early palliative care
- Track 20-5Widowed spouses health care
- Track 20-6Health care utilization poor prognosis cancer
- Track 20-7Health care challenges and Quality of life
Complementary therapies are becoming increasingly used during the final stages of a condition, to enhance palliative or end-of-life care. These aim to help the patient cope with pain and the fear associated with the unknown, further decline, and death. These therapies include are designed to restore the body/mind balance and include things like aromatherapy, guided relaxation and imagery, music therapy, and therapeutic touch. They are thought to have a positive effect when it comes to helping the patient fall asleep, easing muscle tension, enhancing the effect of pain medication, enhancing rest, and relieving anxiety.
- Track 21-1Hospital palliative care consultation programs
- Track 21-2Dimension of palliative care
- Track 21-3Critical illnesses palliative care
- Track 21-4Palliative care in hospital
- Track 21-5Home palliative care
- Track 21-6Non pain therapy
Palliative care at the end of life involves meeting the physical, psychological, social, and practical needs of patients and caregivers. It is not limited to the short period of time when the person is moribund. Good clinical care can prevent or alleviate suffering for many patients at the end of life by assessing symptoms and providing psychological and social support to the patients and their families.
- Track 22-1Hospital palliative care consultation programs
- Track 22-2palliative care patients psychosocial interventions
- Track 22-3Randomized controlled trial palliative care
- Track 22-4Hospital palliative care consultation programs
- Track 22-5 Palliative care wound treatment and spoon feeding
- Track 22-6Palliative care for Supportive oncology
Research shows that palliative care and its many components are beneficial to patient and family health and well-being. Several studies in recent years have shown that patients who have their symptoms controlled and are able to communicate their emotional needs have a better experience with their medical care. Their quality of life and physical symptoms improve.
- Track 23-1 Palliative care and Mentorship
- Track 23-2 Palliative care and Professional socialisation
- Track 23-3Better outcomes for Patient care
- Track 23-4Focus on practice coaching
Advance care planning is a process that enables individuals to make plans about their future health care. Advance care plans provide direction to healthcare professionals when a person is not able to plan either make and/or communicate their own healthcare choices. Advance care planning is applicable to adults at all stages of life. Participation in advance care planning has been shown to reduce stress and anxiety for patients and their families, and lead to improvements in end of life care.
- Track 24-1Home Support Program
- Track 24-2Residential aged care facilities (RACFs) and Aged care training
- Track 24-3Aged care training and resources
- Track 24-4healthcare processes
- Track 24-5Provide training workshops
- Track 24-6Patient and family/loved ones involvement
Palliative Care 2016 provides great avenues for Investors seeking for investment opportunities and expanding their business horizons. Our conference is attended by participants from more than 40 countries and attracts an interesting combination of academic researchers, practitioners and individuals who are engaged in various aspects of innovations in Palliative Care research thereby providing plenty of networking opportunities and newfound knowledge.
Pediatric palliative and/or hospice care is both a philosophy and an organized method for delivering individualized care to children with life-threatening conditions. This care focuses on enhancing quality of life for the child and family, preventing and/or minimizing suffering, optimizing function, and providing opportunities for personal and spiritual growth. As such, it can be provided along with concurrent life-prolonging or curative care or as the main focus of care. Pediatric palliative and/or hospice care is achieved through a combination of active and compassionate therapies intended to comfort and support the child, as well as family members and other significant people in the child’s life. Effective management of pain and other distressing symptoms, together with psychosocial and spiritual care, are of critical importance beginning at diagnosis and continuing throughout the entire course of a child’s life and beyond. Therapies should take a holistic approach, assisting children and families in fulfilling their physical, psychological, social, developmental, educational and spiritual goals while remaining sensitive to personal, cultural and religious values, beliefs and practices.