The Government's End of Life Care Strategy was launched on 16th July 2008. This is the Department of Health's first ever strategy for end-of-life care.
You can read the End of Life Care Strategy here
Dignity in Dying welcomes the publication of the Strategy, which aims to provide people with more choice at the end of life. Recent polling, commissioned by Dignity in Dying, has confirmed that 86% of the British public think it is important for people who are terminally ill and reaching the end of their lives to be able to exercise choice about their care and treatment.
On paper the Strategy is a significant step forwards, and we are delighted that many of the proposals in our Charter for Dignity at the End of Life look set to be implemented. However, delivery and implementation are vital if the Government is to ensure that people's legitimate expectations of choice, control and access to services at the end of life are met by reality.
It is absolutely vital that terminally ill patients are given the opportunity to express their preferences around end-of-life care, and that these are recorded and, wherever possible, respected. Consequently, Dignity in Dying welcomes the emphasis on care planning in the Strategy and the announced measures to support people to die in their place of preference.
We also welcome plans to ensure that carers are appropriately supported both during a patient's life and after bereavement, and that health and social care professionals at all levels are provided with the necessary education and training to enable them to provide high quality care. We are also pleased the Government has acknowledged the need to increase public awareness and discussion of death and dying - as this will encourage individuals to discuss their own preferences around end-of-life care. However, to achieve this vital goal the Government need to ensure that the proposed 'national coalition' to promote this debate is comprised of patients and patient groups as well as end-of-life care providers.
It is now time for good theory to become good practice. Responsibility for delivering the End of Life Care Strategy rests with the individual trusts. All individual trusts will need to buy into this Strategy in order to achieve universal access to good quality care at the end of life, independent of diagnosis or the place people live.
The Strategy states that quality standards and other mechanisms for measuring the progress of its implementation are currently being developed. These will need to be put in place as soon as possible, in order to measure the progress made in improving the delivery of end-of-life care.
We look forward to improvements in end-of-life care across all settings and for all patients, regardless of their condition or the place they live. It is time for the postcode lottery in accessing good quality end-of-life care to end.
You can read the End of Life Care Strategy here

























