MPs, doctors and charities have drawn up a blueprint to deliver an "unprecedented transformation" of care for 100,000 people a year in the final stages of life. After parliament's historic vote on Friday in favour of legalising assisted dying in England and Wales, a commission on palliative care has been set up to help improve end-of-life treatment whether or not someone opts for an assisted death.
The Guardian has seen the details of its ambition that every dying person gets high-quality medical and emotional support.
The former Labour prime minister Gordon Brown, who made a powerful intervention opposing assisted dying, is understood to support the plan.
The creation of the commission comes as experts warn that ramping up end of life care and starting to offer assisted dying will pose massive challenges for the NHS. There is uncertainty over where such services will be provided, which staff will be involved and how much it will cost.
Palliative care is now provided by a combination of the NHS, hospices and charities such as Marie Curie but it is subject to what critics say is a cruel postcode lottery. At least 100,000 people a year are estimated to miss out on such care, meaning they are denied a dignified death and can suffer avoidable pain, with loved ones left in distress.
Under the terms of reference of the commission, which is being created by the Labour MP Rachael Maskell, dying people - children as well as adults - would receive ongoing "holistic" support with all of their needs from the moment they are diagnosed with an incurable illness.
This story is from the December 02, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the December 02, 2024 edition of The Guardian.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Jones back to run rule over England as ITV pundit
Eddie Jones will cast a critical eye over England's make-or-break Six Nations campaign with the former head coach signed as an ITV pundit for the forthcoming championship.
UK second most attractive country in investor survey
The UK is the second most attractive country for investment behind the US, signalling a climb up the rankings, according to an annual survey of global business leaders by the consultancy PwC.
Robot retailers Firms embrace automation to cut staffing costs
Electronic shelf labels, returns machines, robot bag packers and yet more self-service tills are just some of the many technologies that UK retailers are embracing as they try to solve the problem of rising labour costs.
Svitolina surges on but watches husband Monfils exit
In the aftermath of a comeback win that put her into the 12th grand slam quarter-final of her career, Elina Svitolina left Rod Laver Arena aware her most difficult task of the day was still to come.
Tielemans now Villa's pacemaker at heart of resurgence
Former Leicester midfielder has proved sceptics wrong with his displays central to the side's transformation
Rashford open to playing for United despite looming exit
Marcus Rashford is ready and available to play for Manchester United, the Guardian understands, after Ruben Amorim indicated the forward had ruled himself out of contention for the defeat by Brighton on Sunday.
Use of rehabilitation and tags could allow a women's prison to close, says minister
A women's jail in England or Wales should be closed by diverting offenders to other forms of punishment and rehabilitation, the prisons minister, James Timpson, has said.
Comedy review: It's strictly stand-up as music stops
\"Twenty-one years of hard graft on the comedy scene, to now be best known for dancing.\" The ironies of his newfound celebrity are not lost on Chris McCausland, not only the winner of last year's Strictly Come Dancing but a contestant so well-loved that he's been credited with redeeming the entire franchise.
Fashion The first lady or a mob wife at a funeral?
In the Capitol rotunda the incoming first lady was nowhere to be seen.
Alaska Resumes Its 'Inhumane' Shooting of Bears and Wolves
Alaska is to resume the aerial shooting of bears and wolves to boost caribou and moose numbers despite an official report casting doubt on the value of the practice.