Ranking: The quality of death 2010
Related content
Value-based healthcare in Sweden: Reaching the next level
The need to get better value from healthcare investment has never been more important as ageing populations and increasing numbers of people with multiple chronic conditions force governments to make limited financial resources go further.
These pressures, along with a greater focus on patient-centred care, have raised the profile of VBHC, especially in European healthcare systems. Sweden, with its highly comprehensive and egalitarian healthcare system, has been a leader in implementing VBHC from the beginning, a fact that was underscored in a 2016 global assessment of VBHC published by The Economist Intelligence Unit.
This paper looks at the ways in which Sweden has implemented VBHC, the areas in which it has faced obstacles and the lessons that it can teach other countries and health systems looking to improve the value of their own healthcare investments.
Breast cancer patients and survivors in the Asia-Pacific workforce
With more older women also working, how will the rising trend of breast cancer survivorship manifest in workplace policies, practices and culture? What challenges do breast cancer survivors face when trying to reintegrate into the workforce, or to continue working during treatment? How can governments, companies and society at large play a constructive role?
This series of reports looks at the situation for breast cancer survivors in Australia, New Zealand and South Korea. It finds that while progress has been made, more needs to be done, particularly in South Korea, where public stigma around cancer remains high.The Cost of Silence
Cardiovascular diseases levy a substantial financial toll on individuals, their households and the public finances. These include the costs of hospital treatment, long-term disease management and recurring incidence of heart attacks and stroke. They also include the costs of functional impairment and knock-on costs as families may lose breadwinners or have to withdraw other family members from the workforce to care for a CVD patient. Governments also lose tax revenue due to early retirement and mortality, and can be forced to reallocate public finances from other budgets to maintain an accessible healthcare system in the face of rising costs.
As such, there is a need for more awareness of the ways in which people should actively work to reduce their CVD risk. There is also a need for more primary and secondary preventative support from health agencies, policymakers and nongovernmental groups.
To inform the decisions and strategies of these stakeholders, The Economist Intelligence Unit and EIU Healthcare, its healthcare subsidiary, have conducted a study of the prevalence and costs of the top four modifiable risk factors that contribute to CVDs across the Asian markets of China, Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand.
Download the report to learn more.
2015 Quality of Death Index
The UK ranks first in the 2015 Quality of Death Index, a measure of the quality of palliative care in 80 countries around the world released today by The Economist Intelligence Unit (EIU). Its ranking is due to comprehensive national policies, the extensive integration of palliative care into the National Health Service, a strong hospice movement, and deep community engagement on the issue. The UK also came top in the first Quality of Death Index, produced in 2010.
More from this series
white paper
2015 Quality of Death Index
blog
The new palliative care gold standard
The EIU’s recent Quality of Death report praised palliative care in the UK as the best in the world, citing the
blog
Death’s Long Shadow: Finding A Better Way Out
By Sarah Murray, writer on business, society and the environment Across the world, the question of whether or
infographic
Infographic: 2015 Quality of Death Index
Click to view infographic  
infographic
2015 Quality of Death Index Infographic Chinese
Click here to download
Related content
The new palliative care gold standard
The EIU’s recent Quality of Death report praised palliative care in the UK as the best in the world, citing the quality and availability of services provided by the NHS and hospice movement as “second to none”. Nonetheless, the report highlighted room for improvement, echoing findings of the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman in England that criticised end-of-life care services.
As a clinician working on the front line of palliative care delivery there is no denying that being the best across 80 countries is a great achievement and testament to the dedicated work that goes on every day. While we should acknowledge our achievement, this is not a time to become complacent. We are good but could do better; there is a lot of work to be done to maintain that lead position.
We need to address the points that have been highlighted as areas for improvement, including better symptom control, better availability of out-of-hours cover, more flexible services and more responsive services. How do we do this when expectations are higher than ever, NHS resources are stretched and the “out of hours” period is two-thirds of the week?
In my mind there is only one solution: Advance Care Plans (ACP), and the communication and sharing of these plans digitally with the urgent care services that operate 24/7. Creating ACPs enables patients to take control and make choices with their usual doctor and nurse. Through the sharing of this information with the urgent care providers, the right care can be provided, at the right time, in the right place—24/7.
Across London this work has already begun, with an innovative NHS service called Coordinate My Care (CMC). This coordinates the care of patients and provides them with choice and the assurance that all the healthcare professional teams involved in their care are connected and mindful of these choices, whenever they are treated.
A digital, personalised urgent care plan underpins the service. This documents a patient’s views and wishes, and can be seen by the entire multidisciplinary team involved in their care, 24/7.
The priority of CMC is to support and facilitate the provision of integrated health and social care by bridging the divide between community, acute and urgent care settings, with integration of the voluntary sector. CMC integrates care across London both in and out-of-hours, including GPs, community nurses, community palliative care teams, hospitals, hospices, social workers, the London Ambulance Service, NHS 111 and nursing/care homes. The service is clinician-led, with clinical governance embedded into its framework.
To date, 24,676 CMC personalised urgent care plans have been created for patients. I strongly believe this model is the next phase in palliative and urgent care provision excellence. Online banking and the ATM and have given us 24/7 access to our finances. Digital ACPs could be the answer to flexible, 24/7 patient care.
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited (EIU) or any other member of The Economist Group. The Economist Group (including the EIU) cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.
Death’s Long Shadow: Finding A Better Way Out
By Sarah Murray, writer on business, society and the environment
Across the world, the question of whether or not people should have the right to end their own lives is gaining attention. But while the debate is an important one, for me, an equally important question is how to extend the right kind of care to people living in pain and distress or with incurable conditions. And while progress is being made, we are still failing to meet this basic human need.
This is the message that emerged during my research for a report that accompanies a new index assessing countries around the world on their provision of palliative care. The 2015 Quality of Death Index—commissioned by Singapore’s Lien Foundation and developed by the Economist Intelligence Unit—ranks 80 countries on how well they are doing on this.
In the past five years, as the report reveals, advances have certainly been made. And on the policy front, one of the most important moments came last year when the World Health Assembly passed a resolution calling on member states to integrate palliative care into their national healthcare systems.
But while international declarations are one thing, putting aspirations into practice is quite another. And when it comes to palliative care, the obstacles are not to be underestimated.
For a start, modern healthcare systems are often built on a culture that prioritises cure rather than care. Too often, the focus is on prolonging life through expensive, painful and potentially fruitless medical interventions, rather than alleviating pain and emotional distress.
In many places, a shortage of trained doctors and nurses limits the availability of care. And reimbursement incentives—which in countries such as the US have followed a model in where payments are made for individual procedures rather than overall results—need to be shifted to accommodate the more holistic approach of palliative care.
Moreover, as much of the evidence shows, palliative care is generally more cost effective than the alternatives. One review of the literature found that it was often cheaper than other forms of care and that in most cases the cost difference was statistically significant.
Economics aside, there is a moral agenda here. I found it interesting, for example, that when in 2009 the woefully poor access to painkillers in India was brought to the world’s attention, it was not by a medical journal or healthcare report. It was by Human Rights Watch.
Since then, as the Quality of Death Index reveals, India has made progress in providing painkillers to its citizens, relaxing the outdated drugs laws that once made it hard for doctors to prescribe morphine. And a number of teaching programmes are appearing across the country.
On the whole, income levels provide a strong indicator of the availability and quality of palliative care, as you can see from the countries in the upper echelons of the Quality of Death ranking (the UK comes first with Australia and New Zealand in second and third place).
Yet beacons of hope are emerging in unexpected places. In Mongolia, for example, visionary doctor Odontuya Davaasuren has introduced the concept of palliative care to a country that was previously unaware of such services. Thanks to her tireless campaigning, Mongolia has a growing number of hospices, palliative care is part of social welfare legislation and morphine is available on prescription.
Meanwhile, through an innovative programme developed by Hospice Africa Uganda, a pioneering institution founded by Anne Merriman, Uganda is making opioid painkillers available throughout the country.
But even in places that do well in the Quality of Death Index much more work needs to be done before all those in need of care are accommodated.
In New South Wales, for example, most palliative care in the state, which is home to one-third of Australia’s population, is still carried out by nurses and, outside the Sydney area, only a handful of specialist doctors practice palliative care.
Meanwhile, despite evidence of its economic benefits and the fact that at some point most people will be in need of palliative care, a tiny proportion of healthcare research goes into this branch of healthcare. And while attitudes are changing, discussions about the end of life between patients and doctors are still not the norm.
But the clock is ticking. As the world’s population ages rapidly, the number of people living longer but with a number of chronic conditions means demand for care is likely to increase dramatically in the coming years. This makes investing in developing better palliative care services an urgent task.
Of course, for some people, no amount of palliative care will alleviate the suffering. And in these cases, the argument for allowing people to end their lives is a strong one. However, the right-to-die campaign should not be allowed to eclipse what I believe is the other critically important debate—the discussion about the right to a peaceful, comfortable and pain-free end of life.
Original article published by Sarah Murray at https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/deaths-long-shadow-finding-better-way-out-sarah-murray?published=t
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited (EIU) or any other member of The Economist Group. The Economist Group (including the EIU) cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.
2015 Quality of Death Index
Related content
The new palliative care gold standard
The EIU’s recent Quality of Death report praised palliative care in the UK as the best in the world, citing the quality and availability of services provided by the NHS and hospice movement as “second to none”. Nonetheless, the report highlighted room for improvement, echoing findings of the Parliamentary and Health Service Ombudsman in England that criticised end-of-life care services.
As a clinician working on the front line of palliative care delivery there is no denying that being the best across 80 countries is a great achievement and testament to the dedicated work that goes on every day. While we should acknowledge our achievement, this is not a time to become complacent. We are good but could do better; there is a lot of work to be done to maintain that lead position.
We need to address the points that have been highlighted as areas for improvement, including better symptom control, better availability of out-of-hours cover, more flexible services and more responsive services. How do we do this when expectations are higher than ever, NHS resources are stretched and the “out of hours” period is two-thirds of the week?
In my mind there is only one solution: Advance Care Plans (ACP), and the communication and sharing of these plans digitally with the urgent care services that operate 24/7. Creating ACPs enables patients to take control and make choices with their usual doctor and nurse. Through the sharing of this information with the urgent care providers, the right care can be provided, at the right time, in the right place—24/7.
Across London this work has already begun, with an innovative NHS service called Coordinate My Care (CMC). This coordinates the care of patients and provides them with choice and the assurance that all the healthcare professional teams involved in their care are connected and mindful of these choices, whenever they are treated.
A digital, personalised urgent care plan underpins the service. This documents a patient’s views and wishes, and can be seen by the entire multidisciplinary team involved in their care, 24/7.
The priority of CMC is to support and facilitate the provision of integrated health and social care by bridging the divide between community, acute and urgent care settings, with integration of the voluntary sector. CMC integrates care across London both in and out-of-hours, including GPs, community nurses, community palliative care teams, hospitals, hospices, social workers, the London Ambulance Service, NHS 111 and nursing/care homes. The service is clinician-led, with clinical governance embedded into its framework.
To date, 24,676 CMC personalised urgent care plans have been created for patients. I strongly believe this model is the next phase in palliative and urgent care provision excellence. Online banking and the ATM and have given us 24/7 access to our finances. Digital ACPs could be the answer to flexible, 24/7 patient care.
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited (EIU) or any other member of The Economist Group. The Economist Group (including the EIU) cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.
Death’s Long Shadow: Finding A Better Way Out
By Sarah Murray, writer on business, society and the environment
Across the world, the question of whether or not people should have the right to end their own lives is gaining attention. But while the debate is an important one, for me, an equally important question is how to extend the right kind of care to people living in pain and distress or with incurable conditions. And while progress is being made, we are still failing to meet this basic human need.
This is the message that emerged during my research for a report that accompanies a new index assessing countries around the world on their provision of palliative care. The 2015 Quality of Death Index—commissioned by Singapore’s Lien Foundation and developed by the Economist Intelligence Unit—ranks 80 countries on how well they are doing on this.
In the past five years, as the report reveals, advances have certainly been made. And on the policy front, one of the most important moments came last year when the World Health Assembly passed a resolution calling on member states to integrate palliative care into their national healthcare systems.
But while international declarations are one thing, putting aspirations into practice is quite another. And when it comes to palliative care, the obstacles are not to be underestimated.
For a start, modern healthcare systems are often built on a culture that prioritises cure rather than care. Too often, the focus is on prolonging life through expensive, painful and potentially fruitless medical interventions, rather than alleviating pain and emotional distress.
In many places, a shortage of trained doctors and nurses limits the availability of care. And reimbursement incentives—which in countries such as the US have followed a model in where payments are made for individual procedures rather than overall results—need to be shifted to accommodate the more holistic approach of palliative care.
Moreover, as much of the evidence shows, palliative care is generally more cost effective than the alternatives. One review of the literature found that it was often cheaper than other forms of care and that in most cases the cost difference was statistically significant.
Economics aside, there is a moral agenda here. I found it interesting, for example, that when in 2009 the woefully poor access to painkillers in India was brought to the world’s attention, it was not by a medical journal or healthcare report. It was by Human Rights Watch.
Since then, as the Quality of Death Index reveals, India has made progress in providing painkillers to its citizens, relaxing the outdated drugs laws that once made it hard for doctors to prescribe morphine. And a number of teaching programmes are appearing across the country.
On the whole, income levels provide a strong indicator of the availability and quality of palliative care, as you can see from the countries in the upper echelons of the Quality of Death ranking (the UK comes first with Australia and New Zealand in second and third place).
Yet beacons of hope are emerging in unexpected places. In Mongolia, for example, visionary doctor Odontuya Davaasuren has introduced the concept of palliative care to a country that was previously unaware of such services. Thanks to her tireless campaigning, Mongolia has a growing number of hospices, palliative care is part of social welfare legislation and morphine is available on prescription.
Meanwhile, through an innovative programme developed by Hospice Africa Uganda, a pioneering institution founded by Anne Merriman, Uganda is making opioid painkillers available throughout the country.
But even in places that do well in the Quality of Death Index much more work needs to be done before all those in need of care are accommodated.
In New South Wales, for example, most palliative care in the state, which is home to one-third of Australia’s population, is still carried out by nurses and, outside the Sydney area, only a handful of specialist doctors practice palliative care.
Meanwhile, despite evidence of its economic benefits and the fact that at some point most people will be in need of palliative care, a tiny proportion of healthcare research goes into this branch of healthcare. And while attitudes are changing, discussions about the end of life between patients and doctors are still not the norm.
But the clock is ticking. As the world’s population ages rapidly, the number of people living longer but with a number of chronic conditions means demand for care is likely to increase dramatically in the coming years. This makes investing in developing better palliative care services an urgent task.
Of course, for some people, no amount of palliative care will alleviate the suffering. And in these cases, the argument for allowing people to end their lives is a strong one. However, the right-to-die campaign should not be allowed to eclipse what I believe is the other critically important debate—the discussion about the right to a peaceful, comfortable and pain-free end of life.
Original article published by Sarah Murray at https://www.linkedin.com/pulse/deaths-long-shadow-finding-better-way-out-sarah-murray?published=t
The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of The Economist Intelligence Unit Limited (EIU) or any other member of The Economist Group. The Economist Group (including the EIU) cannot accept any responsibility or liability for reliance by any person on this article or any of the information, opinions or conclusions set out in the article.
Ranking: The quality of death
The Economist Intelligence Unit was commissioned by the Lien Foundation, a Singaporean philanthropic organisation, to devise a "Quality of Death" Index to rank countries according to their provision of end-of-life care.
More from this series
white paper
Ranking: The quality of death 2010
Related content
Value-based healthcare in Sweden: Reaching the next level
The need to get better value from healthcare investment has never been more important as ageing populations and increasing numbers of people with multiple chronic conditions force governments to make limited financial resources go further.
These pressures, along with a greater focus on patient-centred care, have raised the profile of VBHC, especially in European healthcare systems. Sweden, with its highly comprehensive and egalitarian healthcare system, has been a leader in implementing VBHC from the beginning, a fact that was underscored in a 2016 global assessment of VBHC published by The Economist Intelligence Unit.
This paper looks at the ways in which Sweden has implemented VBHC, the areas in which it has faced obstacles and the lessons that it can teach other countries and health systems looking to improve the value of their own healthcare investments.
Breast cancer patients and survivors in the Asia-Pacific workforce
With more older women also working, how will the rising trend of breast cancer survivorship manifest in workplace policies, practices and culture? What challenges do breast cancer survivors face when trying to reintegrate into the workforce, or to continue working during treatment? How can governments, companies and society at large play a constructive role?
This series of reports looks at the situation for breast cancer survivors in Australia, New Zealand and South Korea. It finds that while progress has been made, more needs to be done, particularly in South Korea, where public stigma around cancer remains high.The Cost of Silence
Cardiovascular diseases levy a substantial financial toll on individuals, their households and the public finances. These include the costs of hospital treatment, long-term disease management and recurring incidence of heart attacks and stroke. They also include the costs of functional impairment and knock-on costs as families may lose breadwinners or have to withdraw other family members from the workforce to care for a CVD patient. Governments also lose tax revenue due to early retirement and mortality, and can be forced to reallocate public finances from other budgets to maintain an accessible healthcare system in the face of rising costs.
As such, there is a need for more awareness of the ways in which people should actively work to reduce their CVD risk. There is also a need for more primary and secondary preventative support from health agencies, policymakers and nongovernmental groups.
To inform the decisions and strategies of these stakeholders, The Economist Intelligence Unit and EIU Healthcare, its healthcare subsidiary, have conducted a study of the prevalence and costs of the top four modifiable risk factors that contribute to CVDs across the Asian markets of China, Australia, Hong Kong, Japan, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan and Thailand.
Download the report to learn more.