Palliative Care Newsletter - Fall 2014

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THE

LILIAN AND BENJAMIN HERTZBERG PALLIATIVE CARE INSTITUTE

PALLIATIVE CARE NEWSLETTER FALL 2014

Hertzberg Director Wins Prestigious AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY GRANT R. Sean Morrison, MD

Funding will develop programs in specialized palliative care for children and foster a new generation of palliative care researchers Dr. R. Sean Morrison, Director of the Hertzberg Palliative Care Institute and the National Palliative Care Research Center (NPCRC), was in April granted the American Cancer Society’s most highly regarded research award. The American Cancer Society’s Clinical Research Professor Award, one of only two such grants available annually, will bring $400,000 to NPCRC over the next five years to develop programs in specialized palliative care for pediatric cancer patients and to help nurture a new generation of young researchers in the field of palliative care. “The fact that the American Cancer Society gave a palliative medicine physician their most prestigious research award clearly demonstrates the strides and impact that our field has made in this country,” said Dr. Morrison. Palliative care is a relatively new and growing medical specialty focused on relieving the symptoms, pain and stress of serious illness for patients and their families. It provides an added layer of support for patients of all ages and at all stages of any serious or advanced illness, regardless of the prognosis.

However, many existing techniques for managing pain and other symptoms have been developed for adults and do not adapt well to the treatment of children, explains Dr. Morrison. “We have a tremendous lack of evidence for how to effectively treat children with symptoms as common as pain or fatigue. These are symptoms that can rob pediatric patients of their childhood and for some patients can continue well into their adult lives,” he said. “Our hope is to really help improve the evidence base for kids with serious illness.” Dr. Morrison expects the grant to help foster a new generation of early-stage investigators in the field of palliative care and to provide palliative care researchers all over the country with a central place to access the technical assistance they need to advance their work. Dr. Morrison’s hope is that such research will help to plug the gaps in the evidence base for palliative care. This includes finding or improving techniques for the management of symptoms such as breathlessness, fatigue, anxiety, continued on page 4

BROOKDALE DEPARTMENT of GERIATRICS AND PALLIATIVE MEDICINE


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