Today marks the World Palliative Care Dayis celebrated every year on the second Saturday in October. The event is organised by World Hospice and Palliative Care Alliance (WHPCA) and, in 2025, it will take place under the theme "Achieving the Promise: Universal Access to Palliative Care"reaffirming the global commitment to equitable access to quality palliative care at all stages of life.
More than 60 million people - including adults and children - need palliative care every year, with the majority living in low- and middle-income countries. This year's theme takes up the 2014 resolution of the World Health Assembly (WHO's main decision-making body), which called for the strengthening of palliative care as an essential component of lifelong healthcare, emphasising the urgency of fulfil that promise.
A Order of Physiotherapists associates itself with this date, emphasising the role of the profession in promoting the dignity, autonomy and quality of life of people with chronic, incurable or end-of-life illnesses.
- Physiotherapy is an essential tool for promoting functional independence, autonomy and comfort in palliative care patients.
- As part of the interdisciplinary team, the physiotherapist develops individualised intervention plans for pain relief, fatigue management, anxiety control and the prevention of complications resulting from bed rest or immobilisation.
- The physiotherapist, as a movement specialist, has a fundamental contribution to make in preserving the dignity and quality of life of every person.
Movement is life.
Read the full article on Physiotherapy in Palliative Care, published in Mais Magazine, here.