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5 billion people in our world do not
have access to pain relief and palliative care, many of these with chronic,
debilitating, life limiting illness. HIV AIDS as we have already heard but also rising numbers of those with cancer, growing problems with heart
disease, rapidly increasing numbers with poorly controlled diabetes, kidney failure
with little access to dialysis and multiple respiratory problems due in part to
cooking fires in huts with poor ventilation.
This burden of disease has an
incalculable effect on individuals, families, communities and even national
economies as it disproportionately affects those in low and middle income
countries exacerbating poverty and creating a trap for many more to fall into, where meager resources are used in a futile search for help and future
generations denied opportunities and hope. This global pandemic of untreated
pain affects hundreds of millions of people in our world and is described by the World Health Assembly as an urgent, humanitarian
responsibility.
Livingstone's Rousers |
Oral morphine, one of the mainstays of pain relief is simply
unavailable in most of the world. Of all the morphine legally produced and used
every year 94% is used by countries that represent only 15% of the world’s
population. One of Livingstone’s achievements was
to ensure that a simple medication made from Peruvian tree bark would be
available in a safe and effective formulation. These ‘Livingstone’s Rousers’, which
combined quinine and rhubarb, were a
significant advance and I think he would use same energy and determination to champion the provision of another God given medication; the extract of opium we
call morphine.
Imagine the anguish of medical colleagues seeing patients in
such severe pain yet unable to help, imagine the distress on a mothers face
when her tiny daughter injured by severe burns when she pulled over paraffin
lamp screams in pain without relief, imagine the quiet endurance and silent
agony of a young mother whose breast cancer has spread to her bones and dares not move lest it hurt, imagine the nurse who avoids dressing the wounds of her patient as she cannot bear to hear the shouts of pain, imagine
the elderly man who prays that God will take him soon to spare him further anguish
and stop draining the family finances.
Palliative care is about quality of life and holistic
support addressing the physical problems such as pain but also the isolation and financial drain of chronic illness, the loss of hope and meaning, the
powerlessness and despair. It is about empowering communities, restoring
dignity, relieving suffering, walking alongside those who face darkness and
despair with all our medical skills and also a message of hope and promise of
presence.
Livingstone engaged with some of the
greatest causes of suffering and injustice in his day but above all he was
concerned with what would Jesus do. WWJD leads to WWLD.
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Ladies and gentleman; lack of access
to pain control and palliative care is one of the most significant global
injustices facing our world today. I put it to you that freedom from pain, restoring dignity and relieving suffering would
have been a concern, a motive, an imperative and a journey of untold adventure
for Livingstone; as it is for each one of us.'
2 comments:
It was a good speech Mhoira and a really moving and inspiring occaision...xx
Amazing speech, Mhoira, so poignant and resonates with what we see on a daily basis. Spurs me on to keep going as you've done so admirably. Ann
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