Integration of care at the end of life and after loss. Best practices of integrated end of life care in Europe 2403-OG-EN-ICFPB
The aims of this course are to familiarize the concept of End-of-life care (EOL), usually refers to the last year of life, although for some people this will be longer (long term severe diseases as dementia) or significantly shorter. End of life care is not just the medical care provided to the individual who is dying, but also refers to the social support available to patients, their family carers, and to bereavement support for families.
Good practices in EOL care in Europe will include good cooperation of interdisciplinary hospice-palliative care team with families (family carers) and local communities. Particular emphasis will be on non-medical aspects of care, including interdisciplinary team performance, innovative methods of social education, volunteering, support of families and bereavement services. The social problems in patients and their families at the end of life will be assessed and explained in details, as end-of-life is not only the medical but mostly social event. The principles of the interdisciplinary team and the special role of social work in end of life care will be presented. Hospice-palliative care in social education about end of life, death and mourning, with particular attention towards voluntary service and social work in Europe will be addressed.
Students will learn about: the hospice-palliative care; emotional and social needs of patients and their families at the end of life and after the loss; the role of psychologist and social workers in EOL care; the basic concept of hospice volunteering; basic knowledge about bereavement and emotional support; public education about end of life care. This knowledge will allow to work in the interdisciplinary EOLC team, assist the family members or friends towards the end of their life, and answer personally to the fundamental human questions regarding death, and end-of-life issues.
Term 2022/23Z:
https://teams.microsoft.com/l/channel/19%3a417068eec1584c408f906b6fe9f70226%40thread.tacv2/Og%25C3%25B3lny?groupId=cad83979-79ab-4bc5-940d-050870923737&tenantId=e80a627f-ef94-4aa9-82d6-c7ec9cfca324 |
Term 2023/24Z:
https://teams.microsoft.com/l/channel/19%3a417068eec1584c408f906b6fe9f70226%40thread.tacv2/Og%25C3%25B3lny?groupId=cad83979-79ab-4bc5-940d-050870923737&tenantId=e80a627f-ef94-4aa9-82d6-c7ec9cfca324 |
Total student workload
Learning outcomes - knowledge
Learning outcomes - skills
Learning outcomes - social competencies
Teaching methods
Observation/demonstration teaching methods
Expository teaching methods
- participatory lecture
Exploratory teaching methods
- presentation of a paper
- experimental
- case study
Online teaching methods
- exchange and discussion methods
- cooperation-based methods
- integrative methods
Prerequisites
Course coordinators
Assessment criteria
Assessment methods:
Written essay as an examination- W1, U1,K1 (40%)
Multimedia presentation preparation and execution: W2,3, U2,3 (40%)
Active participation during sharing time and discussions (20%)
fail- 10pts (0-10%)
satisfactory- 11-30 pts (11-30%)
satisfactory plus- 31-50 pts (31-50%)
good – 51-70pts (51-70%)
good plus- 71-80 pts (71-80%)
very good- 81-100 pts (81-100%)
Practical placement
not applicable
This UMK university-wide course will be done online only, so all levels students from different departments in Torun and Bydgoszcz UMK campuses can attend.
Bibliography
Literature in English - available online on the Teams of this course:
Obligatory for this course:
Janowicz A., P. Krakowiak, A. Stolarczyk [Eds.], In Solidarity. Hospice-Palliative care in Poland, Gdańsk 2015, ISBN 978-83-940626-3-7.
Krakowiak P., Leszek Pawłowski, Volunteering in hospice and palliative care in Poland and Eastern Europe, w: The Changing Face of Volunteering in Hospice and Palliative Care, Editors: Ros Scott, Steven Howlett, Oxford University Press 2018, 83.
Krakowiak P., Deka R, Janowicz A., Solidarity and compassion—prisoners as hospice volunteers in Poland. Ann Palliat Med 2018;7(Suppl 2):S109-S117. Available online: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/324892907
Krakowiak P, Skrzypińska K, Damps-Konstańska I, et al. Walls and Barriers. Polish Achievements and the Challenges of Transformation: Building a Hospice Movement in Poland. J Pain Symptom Manage 2016;52:600-4.
Additional reading:
Pawłowski L, Lichodziejewska-Niemierko M, Pawłowska I, Leppert W, and Mróz P. (2016) Nationwide survey on volunteers’ training in hospice and palliative care in Poland, BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care, Published Online First: 29 July 2016 doi:10.1136/bmjspcare-2015-000984.)
Wegleitner K., Heimerl K., Kellehear A. (Eds), Compassionate Communities. Case Studies from Britain and Europe, 1st Edition, Routledge NY, 2016.
Carers UK website: www.carersuk.org/about-us/who-we-are/our-history
Royal College of Nursing UK: https://www.rcn.org.uk/clinical-topics/end-of-life-care
Kellehear A. Compassionate Cities: Public health and end-of-life care. London: Routledge, 2005.
Notes
Term 2021/22Z:
LECTURES ONLINE ONLY - VIA TEAMS |
Term 2022/23Z:
LECTURES ONLINE ONLY - VIA TEAMS |
Term 2023/24Z:
LECTURES ONLINE ONLY - VIA TEAMS |
Additional information
Additional information (registration calendar, class conductors, localization and schedules of classes), might be available in the USOSweb system: