La transición epidemiológica y su impacto en la salud global A new
Transcription
La transición epidemiológica y su impacto en la salud global A new
La transición epidemiológica y su impacto en la salud global A new paradigm in Global Health: Non Communicable Diseases and the urgent need for palliative care Dr Liz Grant Deputy Director, Global Health Academy University of Edinburgh Unforgettable journeys Though we are all born equal we are born into, and we die in, very unequal circumstances. We cannot change the inevitability of death but we can change these unequal circumstances Through the keyhole - by Jo Spiller There is no hierarchy of humanity • Neither within the human race • Nor in the life of a person • Yet our world is constructed to encourage division, inequity has become ingrained, and life is valued for economic gain and not for the soul of the person A perfect storm So many diseases are the products and the by-products of the storms created as the forces of globalisation clash together. Global Causes of Death (2006) Chronic diseases: Infectious diseases: HIV/AIDS 4.9% Tuberculosis 2.4% Heart disease 30.2% Malaria 1.5% Total: 58.0M Cancer 15.7% Diabetes 1.9% Other chronic diseases 15.7% Other Infectious Diseases 20.9% Injuries 9.3% The total number of people dying from chronic diseases is double that of all infectious diseases including HIV/AIDS, tuberculosis and malaria (Nature, 2007). Lancet Global Burden of Disease study 2010 A data audit which showed • 8 million died from cancer ( 1/3 more than in 1990) • 1 in 4 deaths form heart disease or stroke • 1.3 million due to diabetes • And young adults are dying in far greater numbers than appreciated But what lies under this picture The new 21st C diseases: disorders of maladapted modernity Disease burdens that are different A disease vortex of Infectious and NCDs interplaying off each other to create a perfect storm Co-morbidity and multi-morbidity Chronicity Most importantly Drivers of Diseases are different: disease transitions and diseases caused by many winds of change • • • • • • • • Nutritional Demographic Epidemiological Technological Social Economic Political Educational The irony of 21st century health – the drivers of economic prosperity are also the drivers of illness double and triple burdens and the hidden unspoken burden of emptiness, longing, regret, soulessness - a driver we ignore to our peril Social/environmental determinants Actions/Choices Biomarkers Cardiovascular disease Sedentary work Motorised transport Availability of cheap convenience foods Diet high in salt, fat, sugar High alcohol intake Disposable income Raised blood pressure Raised blood glucose Tobacco use Weakening of traditional social and family structures Outdoor environmental pollution Indoor pollution from cooking smoke Limited time Low fruit/vegetable intake Disease Type 2 diabetes Breast cancer Colon cancer Raised cholesterol Prostate cancer Lung cancer Physical inactivity Overweight/ obesity Use of illicit drugs Marketing and advertising Chronic respiratory disease Depression/ mental disorders Work stress Modifiable Risk Factors McQuillan and Grant 2011 Infectious Life style choices Non Communicable Unnamed burden Real life Social Determinants of Health Current systems: we know what to do but don’t know how We know the drivers/ vectors but we have forgotten how nimble they are Weak health systems Infrastructure, governance technology HR, financing Separate systems Concomitant burdens Infectious, NCD, new ENID maternal and child health, Famine, war, climate change, Economic collapse, food security Health inequalities Urban- rural; gender, income, education, What are the Lessons from past and the shared lessons? Recognising the Choice makers and recognising the Change makers – united efforts, whole system change , not just health system change Searching: Eos and Tithonus A world craving Immortal life - but meaning immortal youth Increasingly complex mix of polypathologies consequential, random, age related Growing old decades younger in many countries, while in others constantly paying money to appear younger And in all taking risks that destroy health • Despite best practice and new interventions world mortality rates just don’t change - 7 billion people will die Palliative care: not a niche market but a new global priority A justice development goal • An urgent humanitarian responsibility – “a basic human right” WHO 2005 • Yet palliative care is missing from the international development agenda – the MDGs and their successors, the Sustainable development goals (SDGs) - not a poverty alleviation measure, contributing to an economically viable society. The quality signatures of a nation – how it deals with birth and death Palliative Care…. “ is an approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the problems associated with life-threatening illness, through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual” (WHO 2002) A new palliative care concept - integrated care, with curative and palliative care earlier rather than later. Murray SA, Kendall M, Boyd K, Sheikh A. Illness trajectories and palliative care. BMJ. 2005; 330:1007-1011. Copyright ©2005 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. Living with dying 80% Patients on the palliative care register (%) generalist 80%% specialist 20% 5% Palliative Care 159 2.4 Diagnosis No. of weeks before death (median) ) 2wks Time Mapping diseases trajectories Multi-morbidities normal Copyright ©2008 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. Recognising multi morbidity disease trajectories Function High Stage 1 Living with long term conditions Stage 2 Add supportive and palliative care Stage3 Terminal care, bereavement, support Death Low Self managementTrigger 1 Time Case management –by patient, informal or professional carer Trigger 2 Professional care Mapping multi-dimensional needs Physical Information Social Spiritual Psychological Grant E, Murray SA, Sheikh A. Spiritual dimensions of dying in different cultures. BMJ 2010;341:4859. Fig 1 Unmet spiritual need cycle may result in increased demand and service use3. Grant L et al. BMJ 2010;341:bmj.c4859 ©2010 by British Medical Journal Publishing Group Fluctuations of physical, social, psychological and spiritual wellbeing in family carers of patients with lung cancer Murray, Grant, et al. BMJ 2010;340:c2581 Copyright ©2010 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. Consequences of a lack of palliative care • Aggressive expensive treatments that are focussed on cure • Anxiety among patients, families carers and practitioners • Spiralling poverty • A failure to say goodbye and a failure to let go • PAIN ( in all dimensions) • The costliness of no palliative care sharing from another continent • Health staff who feared to break bad news – cultural, social, emotional, and time reasons. • Families and patients understanding illness in the context of infection • “Always searching for cures and never finding them” • “I spent over a million shillings on care that failed to heal him. I took my own children out of school and sold their inheritance. I sold land, cows, goats, chicken” (Uganda: Aunt of pt) • There is no money in the family because of the many times I attended dispensaries and did not get well ( Kenyan cancer pt) Lack of timely and adequate pain relief • “I would like to go to sleep and wake up dead” Kenyan woman with breast cancer Caring in the moment – social, emotional and spiritual care “I must say the word ‘touch’. We make these people smile…. There was a patient who had a wound that smelled very bad. The patient said, ‘Nurse, you don’t want to touch it.’ But we do touch and treat their wounds….This touching helps put a smile on people’s faces “we instil a sense of hope before hope was lost in pain” (Uganda nurse) Primary Palliative Care Research Group INTEGRATE Strengthening and integrating palliative care into national health systems through a public health primary care approach Palliative care Approach 1. All illnesses 3. All dimensions 2. All times 5. All nations 4. All settings Unforgettable journeys Though we are all born equal we are born into, and we die in, very unequal circumstances. We cannot change the inevitability of death but we can change these unequal circumstances Being Change makers on this journey Little Gidding T.S. Elliot We die with the dying: See, they depart, and we go with them. We are born with the dead: See, they return, and bring us with them With the drawing of this Love and the voice of this Calling We shall not cease from exploration And the end of all our exploring Will be to arrive where we started And know the place for the first time. Through the unknown, remembered …. And all shall be well and All manner of things shall be well