Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda

by Palliative Care Education and Research Consortium
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care in Uganda

Project Report | Jul 11, 2023
Bringing Hope Through Palliative Care July Report

By Grace Kivumbi | Project Administrator

Ronald - our volunteer
Ronald - our volunteer

Clinical care and relationships

In the three months of March, April and May our clinical team, including social worker volunteers, visited our patients 1,139 times. We also contacted them by phone, with 847 calls in this time. Phone calls are especially needed to provide consultation and counselling for patients who are discharged, or to provide grief and bereavement support to the families of patients of those who have died.  We are grateful for your continued support that enables the team to provide care to these patients and their families. 

 This time we would like to share with you a story from one our own team. Please read Ronald’s story below; 

“I WENT THROUGH IT; I UNDERSTAND THE PAIN CANCER PATIENTS GO THROUGH”

My name is Ronald, a cancer patient survivor. Currently I am a volunteer social worker, working with the Palliative care Education and Research Consortium (PcERC) in Mulago Hospital.

For 12 years I have been practicing my social worker skills in Mulago Hospital. It has helped me to become a better social worker and to understand that when our patients die, they die with dignity and with quality of life. Patients with palliative care needs, though they are sick, they still have value and are equally important like any other human being.

Through my volunteering, I have been involved in many trainings (such as the COME hospital care training), whereby we were equipped with skills of caring for patients and their families. I have gained skills in some research activities, such as data transcribing.

Working in the hospital has greatly improved my interpersonal relationship skills and communication skills. I have learned to be a good listener, a good decision maker, and not to be judgmental to people for the mistakes they made in the past.

However, there has been also challenges I have encountered when doing palliative care and these include:

  1.  The problem of language barriers. It has been always difficult to communicate to certain patients, such as refugees. At times you find that you need an interpreter, which makes communication a bit difficult in cases where you don't have any one to translate to their local language.
  2. The myth that people think palliative care is only for the dying patient. Some patients and their families do not welcome us with open arms because they think that when the palliative care team come to visit, the patient then is going to die. Therefore, there is a big need to sensitize people to start palliative care at the onset of the disease. 

Thank you to all the donors and partners for all the support you give to our palliative care unit. For me, personally, I really appreciate the good work you do through supporting our patients and the activities of PcERC.

Patient demographics

We have continued to care for patients and their families during and after their hospital stay and whenever possible, when a patient is discharged the team follows up to provide further support via telephone including referral to another palliative care service in their home area. The majority of our patients have their pain and other symptoms managed by the time they are discharged from the hospital. 

We were honoured to care for 148 patients and their families on our program, in both Mulago and Kiruddu hospital through 1,139 physical reviews and 847 telephone calls. where the patient died (R.I.P. on Ward) the team continues to provide bereavement support through the grieving process.

Please look at the pictures for charts or graphics about the patients we serve. 

Educational activities 

Our experienced team has continued to train and mentor other health care workers from within the county and outside, from clinical clerkships with postgraduate doctors through partner Makerere University. our mission is to promote excellent and accessible palliative care services for all. In the last three months, we have trained and mentored the following categories of professionals; 

  • We continue to train both on the ward (clinical, hands-on practice) and through presentations and organised training sessions. 
  • We have hosted 11 undergraduate students from Makerere University for a 1 week’s rotation in the palliative care unit. 
  • As part of the research activities supported by Cairdeas IPCT we conducted a refresher training in March in the use of the photovoice data collection methodology for 22 Village Health Teams in Adjumani and Obongi districts together with our partner Peace Hospice Adjumani. 
  • In March we commenced mentorship and support supervision visits at place of work for 16 participants on the Uganda Nurse Leadership Fellowship Program from the 8 districts of Uganda were the participants come from, this activity is being carried out by our senior Palliative care nurses from Palliative Education Research Consortium (PcERC) -- Florence and Peace Hospice Adjumani (PEACHOA) - Vicky and is ongoing.
  • We have also hosted 19 nursing students from the Mulago Nursing school between April-May for their hands on practical experience following their classroom lectures. 
  • Through our international collaborations we have also been privileged to host 2 international students from the University of California, USA and Tulane each on a 4-week rotation in palliative care. 
  • In the month of June, we completed the final session of Health Workers Palliative Care training at Kiruddu hospital for 15 professionals facilitated by the PcERC team with funding from Cairdeas International Palliative Care Trust (Cairdeas IPCT), and it will be followed by hands on experience for all participants working alongside our specialist team.
  • On the 13th September we will be holding a Pre-conference workshop as part of the 4th Uganda Conference on Cancer care and will be run by the International Children Palliative Care Network (ICPCN), University of Edinburgh and Palliative Care Education Research Consortium (PcERC) and funded by the Burdett Trust for Nursing Participants of the Uganda Paediatric Nurse leadership program

Research and Conference activities

As the Palliative Care fraternity in Uganda prepares to hold the 4th Uganda Conference on Cancer and Palliative Care conference, due to take place 14th-15th September in Kampala, the team is pleased to submit 5 abstracts from our work that included;

  1. Uganda Children’s Palliative Care Nurse Leadership Fellowship Programme
  2. The lived experiences of people with serious chronic illness among the refugee and host communities of Obongi districts
  3. Telling our story; experience of living with a chronic illness; community generated data using Photovoice in Adjumani and Obongi districts 
  4. Mobile technologies for palliative cancer care in Uganda: Qualitative secondary analysis of health professional perspectives 
  5. Understanding VHTs experiences of providing palliative care and offering mentorship to other VHTs to provide Palliative Care in refugee and host communities of Obongi and Adjumani districts.

We look forward to sharing our work at this conference.  Please look out for highlights from the conference in our next updates report. 

We hope you have enjoyed reading our update! If you have any questions or feedback, please do email u info.pcerc@gmail.com.

Best wishes, 

PcERC team.

Mentorship & support supervision from Florence
Mentorship & support supervision from Florence
Patient data for March to May 2023
Patient data for March to May 2023
Share on Twitter Share on Facebook

About Project Reports

Project reports on GlobalGiving are posted directly to globalgiving.org by Project Leaders as they are completed, generally every 3-4 months. To protect the integrity of these documents, GlobalGiving does not alter them; therefore you may find some language or formatting issues.

If you donate to this project or have donated to this project, you can recieve an email when this project posts a report. You can also subscribe for reports without donating.

Sign up for updates

Organization Information

Palliative Care Education and Research Consortium

Location: Kampala - Uganda
Twitter: @PallCareERC
Project Leader:
Julia Downing
Prof
Kampala , Uganda
$44,397 raised of $50,000 goal
 
626 donations
$5,603 to go
Donate Now
lock
Donating through GlobalGiving is safe, secure, and easy with many payment options to choose from. View other ways to donate

Palliative Care Education and Research Consortium has earned this recognition on GlobalGiving:

Help raise money!

Support this important cause by creating a personalized fundraising page.

Start a Fundraiser

Learn more about GlobalGiving

Teenage Science Students
Vetting +
Due Diligence

Snorkeler
Our
Impact

Woman Holding a Gift Card
Give
Gift Cards

Young Girl with a Bicycle
GlobalGiving
Guarantee

Get incredible stories, promotions, and matching offers in your inbox

WARNING: Javascript is currently disabled or is not available in your browser. GlobalGiving makes extensive use of Javascript and will not function properly with Javascript disabled. Please enable Javascript and refresh this page.