Article ViewAbstractInternational Journal of Medicine and Public Health,2016,6,3,109-110.DOI:10.5530/ijmedph.2016.3.1Published:August 2016Type:EditorialSpecialty training in Palliative Medicine – Need of the hourS Adinarayanan S Adinarayanan Assoc Professor, Dept of anaesthesiology, JIPMER, Pondicherry, INDIA. Abstract:The World Health Organisation (WHO) Global Atlas of Palliative Care at End of Life states that for every 100000 adult population there are 377 requiring palliative care at the end of life.1 It is estimated that worldwide 20 million people require palliative careevery year at their end of life and 69% are adults (over 60 years) and 6% children. Amongst adults 78% who require palliative care live in low and middleincome countries; 90% of this burden is constituted by those dying from non-communicable diseases like cardiovascular, cancer and chronic obstructive pulmonary disorders in that order. Of the children who require palliative care, 98% again belong to low and middle-income countries. This WHO report also estimates that about 37.4% of all deaths from all causes need palliative care. Temel and colleagues showed that there is a survival benefit when palliative care is applied early in the disease process at the time of diagnosis itself.2 This also shows that suffering, when it is well addressed can prolong useful life and benefit patients. In India an estimated 6 million may need palliative care and 60% of those dying annually will die of long suffering from advanced illnesses.3 Even today only 1% of people requiring palliative care are receiving it in India.4 This scenario is only going to worsen as more people are living longer with incurable diseases and the majority are noncommunicable ones like cancer. Read more... Keywords:NilView:PDF (72.52 KB) PDFClick here to download the PDF file. ‹ Int. J. Med. Public Health, Vol 6, Issue 3, Jul-Sep 2016 up Guillain—Barre Syndrome in 2016: The Centenary Advances ›