Community Palliative Care in Turkey: A Collaborative Promoter to a New Concept in the Middle East

dc.contributor.authorEzgi Hacıkamiloglu
dc.contributor.authorEzgi Simsek Utku
dc.contributor.authorZafer Cukurova
dc.contributor.authorBekir Keskinkilic
dc.contributor.authorIbrahim Topcu
dc.contributor.authorMurat Gultekin
dc.contributor.authorMichael Silbermann
dc.contributor.departmentKadın Hastalıkları ve Doğum
dc.date.accessioned2026-03-05T06:51:09Z
dc.date.issued2016-01
dc.description.abstractThe Middle East has been struggling with basic issues of cancer care, and in specific, palliative care, at the primary health care level in the communities. The Middle East Cancer Consortium designated this issue as the highest priority of its activities in the region. Following basic and advanced courses and national and international workshops, local governments recognized the essentiality of developing palliative care services in their respective countries. As the result of these training activities, in 2010, the Ministry of Health in Turkey initiated a novel program whereby population-based and home-based palliative care teams were developed throughout the country, including peripheral regions in the countries where appropriate care was not available. This initiative led to a dramatic increase in the number of cancer patients receiving palliative care at their homes. The Turkish initiative can serve as a model to other countries in the Middle East and beyond it.
dc.description.ozetThe Middle East has been struggling with basic issues of cancer care, and in specific, palliative care, at the primary health care level in the communities. The Middle East Cancer Consortium designated this issue as the highest priority of its activities in the region. Following basic and advanced courses and national and international workshops, local governments recognized the essentiality of developing palliative care services in their respective countries. As the result of these training activities, in 2010, the Ministry of Health in Turkey initiated a novel program whereby population-based and home-based palliative care teams were developed throughout the country, including peripheral regions in the countries where appropriate care was not available. This initiative led to a dramatic increase in the number of cancer patients receiving palliative care at their homes. The Turkish initiative can serve as a model to other countries in the Middle East and beyond it.
dc.embargo.lift2026-03-05T06:51:09Z
dc.embargo.termsAcik erisim
dc.identifier.issue1
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/11655/37962
dc.identifier.uri10.1097/PHH.0000000000000252
dc.identifier.volume22
dc.language.isoen
dc.relation.journalJournal of Public Health Management and Practice
dc.rightsinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
dc.subjectPalliative care
dc.subjectCancer care
dc.subjectHome-based care
dc.subjectHealth policy
dc.subjectTurkey
dc.titleCommunity Palliative Care in Turkey: A Collaborative Promoter to a New Concept in the Middle East
dc.typeinfo:eu-repo/semantics/article

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