Perspectief 2020-48

2020-48 59 22 Worldwide Palliative Care Alliance, World Health Organization. Global Atlas of Palliative Care at the End of Life / Ed. S. R. Connor, M. C. Sepulveda Bermedo, London, 2014, p. 59. 23 Relf M. ‘Bereavement’, ABC of palliative care , Ed. M. Fallon, G. Hanks, 2-nd ed., Oxford: Blackwell Publishing Ltd, 2006, p. 77. 24 Abel J., Kellehear A. ‘Palliative curriculum re -imagined: A critical evaluation of the UK palliative medicine syllabus’, Palliative Care: Research and Treatment , 2018, 11, p. 2. 25 Van der Kloot Meijburg H. H. ‘The lessons we learn: Palliative care in the Netherlands’, Illness, Crisis & Loss , April 2000, 8 (2), p. 109. 26 Arias-Casais N. at al., EAPC Atlas of Palliative Care in Europe 2019 , p.164-165. 27 Brinkman- Stoppelenburg A., Boddaert M., Douma J., Van der Heide A. ‘Palliative care in Dutch hospitals: a rapid increase in the number of expert teams, a limited number of referrals’, BMC Health Services Research , 2016 (16), p. 518. 28 Brinkman-Stoppelenburg A. at al., ‘Palliative care in Dutch hospitals: a rapid increase in the number of ex- pert teams, a limited number of referrals’ , p. 522. 29 Ibid., p. 522. 30 Brinkman-Stoppelenburg A. at al., ‘Palliative care in Dutch hospitals: a rapid increase in the number of ex- pert teams, a limited number of referrals’, p. 522 -525; Francke A.L., Kerkstra A. ‘Palliative care services in The Netherlands: a descriptive study’, Patient Education and Counseling , 2000, 41(1), p. 28. 31 Francke A. L. At al., ‘Palliative care services i n The Netherlands: a descriptive study’, p. 27 32 Low care hospices or Almost at home homes are facilities for 4-6 terminally ill people for whom home care is (temporarily) unavailable and hospital care is disproportionate. These institutions are coordinated by a paid manager, while care is mainly provided by a large group of volunteers (e.g. 60-120). Most of the volun- teer assistants are working shifts of 4 hours a week. Low care hospices are usually sponsored by private foundations . Goossensen A. ‘Hospice a nd palliative care volunteering in the Netherlands. Practices of being there’, Palliative Medicine in Practice , 2018, 12(4), p. 194; Janssens R., ten Have H. ‘Palliative car e in the Neth- erlands’, Palliative Care in Europe: Concepts and Policies , ed. H. ten Have, R. Janssens, Amsterdam: IOS Press, 2001, p. 22. 33 Woitha K. at al., ‘Volunteers in palliative care – a comparison of seven European countries: A descriptive study’, p . 574-575. 34 Luijkx K. G., Schols J.M.G.A. ‘ Volunteers in palliative care make a difference ’ , Journal of palliative care , February 2009, 25 (1), p. 32. 35 Luijkx K. G. at al., ‘ Volunteers in palliative care make a difference ’ , p. 35. 36 Ibid., р . 33-34, 37. 37 Woitha K. at al., ‘Volunteers in palliative care – a comparison of seven European countries: A descriptive study’, p. 574. 38 Francke A. L. At al., ‘Palliative care services in The Netherlands: a descriptive study’ , p. 32. 39 Luijkx K. G. at al., ‘ Volunteers in palliative care make a difference ’ , p. 31.

RkJQdWJsaXNoZXIy MzgxMzI=