Abstract

Children’s palliative care (CPC) is gaining attention worldwide, facilitated by the exchange of knowledge during regular specialised congresses. This article describes the developments in the Netherlands over the past 15 years. The Foundation for Children’s Palliative Expertise (PAL) was established as a nationwide initiative committed to improving palliative care for children countrywide. This led to the development of the first hospital-based CPC team in 2012, which expanded to a total of seven teams adjacent to children’s university hospitals. Regional networks for CPC were developed in parallel to these teams from 2014 onwards. The networks are a collaboration of professionals from different disciplines and organisations, from hospital to homecare, and have covered the aspects of CPC nationally from 2019 onwards. They are connected through the Dutch Knowledge Centre for CPC. This centre was established in 2018 by the PAL Foundation in collaboration with the Dutch Association for Pediatrics. In 2013, the first evidence-based guideline, ‘palliative care for children’, provided access to knowledge for parents and healthcare providers, and in 2017, a format for an individual palliative care plan was established. Within the Knowledge Centre for CPC, a physician’s support centre for dilemma’s regarding the end of life of children was set up. The efforts to have children’s palliative care embedded in the regular Dutch health care insurance are ongoing.

Highlights

  • Before 2007, the care for children with a life-limiting or life-threatening condition in the Netherlands was similar to that in surrounding countries: not a specialty in itself but offered similar to adult palliative care [1]

  • Life-limiting or life-threatening conditions are grouped in four categories as used by the Association for Children’s Palliative Care (ACT): “1

  • Children’s palliative care (CPC) differs from palliative care for adults for several reasons: children in need of palliative care often suffer from different diseases compared to adults, and these diseases are rare, complex, chronic and progressive, with many different symptoms [9]

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Summary

Introduction

Before 2007, the care for children with a life-limiting or life-threatening condition in the Netherlands was similar to that in surrounding countries: not a specialty in itself but offered similar to adult palliative care [1]. The improvement in CPC in the Netherlands started with the best practices in paediatric oncology. This discipline was already more sensitive to the fact that children with uncurable diseases needed palliative care aimed at children and families, with a skilled multidisciplinary approach [3]. Life-limiting or life-threatening conditions are grouped in four categories as used by the Association for Children’s Palliative Care (ACT): “1. Progressive conditions without curative treatment options—treatment focused on palliative care may last for many years—for example, severe metabolic conditions; 4. Irreversible but non-progressive conditions causing severe disability, leading to susceptibility to health complications and likelihood of premature death—for example, complex disabilities such as brain or spinal cord injury” [4]

Children’s Palliative Care Worldwide
Situation CPC in the Netherlands
Situation
Exploration of an Appropriate Approach of CPC
Approach
Evaluation andimportant
Evaluation and Improvement
Results
Conclusions
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