Abstract

Specialized outpatient palliative care (SAPV) was introduced by the legislature in 2007 in §37b of the German Social Code BookV (SGBV) as aform of care for people with alife-limiting illness and an increased complexity of care. It is therefore only required by some of the palliative patients. It is intended to avoid unnecessary hospital admissions and to enable those affected to remain in their home environment in adignified manner despite acomplex illness and to be accompanied there until death. Initially introduced as aform of care for adults, the need for expansion to children and adolescents with life-limiting illnesses soon became apparent, so that care was supplemented in 2011 with specialized pediatric palliative care (SAPPV). Both SAPV and SAPPV involve the use of aspecialized and multiprofessional palliative care team (PCT), which is characterized by 24‑h accessibility and special qualifications, thus providing comprehensive support. This is provided in addition to general outpatient palliative care (AAPV) and aims to maintain, promote and, if possible, improve the quality of life and self-determination at the end of life as much as possible. The SAPV is ahealth insurance benefit and requires aprescription via form63 by aphysician.

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