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  • Palliative Care Falls Short In Armenia

    PALLIATIVE CARE FALLS SHORT IN ARMENIA

    Institute for War and Peace Reporting, UK
    IWPR Caucasus Reporting #695
    July 23 2013

    Current levels of provision fail to relieve suffering of thousands of patients.

    By Lilit Arakelyan - Caucasus

    Doctors in Armenia are calling for radical changes to palliative
    care practices so as to give patients in chronic pain easier access
    to prescription opiates.

    At present, morphine is only prescribed to cancer patients in liquid
    form used for injection, in a process tightly controlled by the
    police. Other painkillers, such as methadone pills, are not available
    at all.

    Hrant Karapetyan, head of the Armenian Pain Control and Palliative
    Care Association, says that only one or two ampoules of morphine can
    be dispensed at one time, providing a maximum of eight hours of pain
    relief a day, and requiring regular return visits to the dispensary.

    "Every year, there are 80,000 to 100,000 people in need of palliative
    care," he said. "In Armenia, however, there is no programme that
    would allow us to help 80,000-100,000 patients at the one time."

    Palliative care is designed to improve the quality of life of patients
    who are terminally ill or suffering as a result of medical treatment,
    and pain relief is an integral part of it.

    Eight months ago, Onik Andreasyan, a 53-year-old from the village of
    Avshar in the Ararat region, was diagnosed with a brain tumour. The
    pain became unbearable, and his wife Marine found it impossible to
    help him.

    "My husband suffered terrible pain," she said. "When his head started
    hurting, he said he felt so bad it was like someone was scratching
    out his eyes. The pain was uncontrollable. In the first three months,
    I gave him various painkillers, but nothing helped."

    Onik reached a stage where he was barely able to walk, and his whole
    left side was severely impaired.

    A few months ago, she heard of a pilot project organised by the
    Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria, together with
    the Open Society Institute and the Armenian health ministry, under
    which patients receive free methadone pills.

    The medication brought her husband's pain under control, and
    significantly improved his quality of life.

    "We want him not to feel pain. When he was suffering, it was bad for
    me as well. We know his condition is untreatable, but at least he
    shouldn't have to feel the pain," Marine said.

    Karapetyan said it was not just cancer patients who required treatment
    to help them with pain.

    "These medicines are available only to those suffering from cancer,
    and that isn't right," he said. "Patients have a right to a life
    without pain. If they are in pain, then they must receive painkillers."

    The pilot project was established two years ago to bring palliative
    care to three Armenian towns. Two schemes are running in Yerevan,
    and two more in Ararat and Vanadzor.

    A few dozen patients are receiving treatment under the project,
    but experts say more than 3,000 people need daily treatment, so
    that Armenia would need 90 schemes of this kind rather than four,
    as well as new legislation allowing doctors to prescribe a greater
    range of medication.

    "We need standards and a law protecting the rights of patients, as
    well as of doctors and nurses," said Anahit Papikyan, coordinator of
    the public health programme at the Open Society Foundation - Armenia.

    "There isn't a single document regulating what dose [of methadone]
    a doctor can give out."

    Stephen Connor, senior executive of the Worldwide Palliative Care
    Alliance and an advisor to the Open Society Foundation, has studied
    the situation in Armenia for three years.

    "First, a policy of introducing palliative care to the healthcare
    sector is needed. Second, there is a lack of the principal medicines,
    specifically of morphine tablets. Third, specialists need to be
    trained," he said.

    A bill drafted drawn up jointly by the Open Society Foundation and the
    health ministry will be presented to the government this month and,
    if approved, will go before parliament in September.

    Suren Krmoyan, a senior official at the health ministry, said part
    of the plan entailed supplying painkillers at lower prices.

    "At the moment, these drugs are mainly injected, but we want to
    introduce them in tablet form," he said. "When we bring in this
    programme - which has already been introduced in many countries in
    the world - the first thing we must do is train the oncologists. We
    expect this training to include social and psychological elements,
    and we're trialling it in our four pilot projects."

    According to Violeta Zopunyan, a lawyer who is helping draft the
    legislation, the most intractable difficulty is designing simplified
    mechanisms for prescribing opiates, with less supervision by the
    police.

    "At the moment, there seems to be a belief that doctors or patients
    might sell these narcotics on the black market," she said. "Another
    major problem is that only oncologists can prescribe these drugs.

    However, other doctors also need to have these powers, including
    those working in mobile palliative care groups and family doctors."

    http://iwpr.net/report-news/palliative-care-falls-short-armenia




    From: A. Papazian
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