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PC for People Experiencing Homelessness: Naheed Dosani

PC for People Experiencing Homelessness: Naheed Dosani

Episode 346 Published 10 months ago
Description

I was very proud to use the word "apotheosis" on today's podcast. See if you can pick out the moment. I say something like, "Palliative care for people experiencing homelessness is, in many ways, the apotheosis of great palliative care." And I believe that to be true. When you think about the early concepts that shaped the field, you can see how palliative care for persons experiencing homelessness fits like a hand in a glove: total pain envisioned by Cicely Saunders, which even its earliest sketches included social suffering like loneliness; or Balfour Mount, who coined the term "palliative care," lamenting the cruel irony of our care for the dying, and the desperate need to create programs to reach more people experiencing suffering.

Today we talk with Naheed Dosani, a palliative care physician at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto, and health justice activist. His story, which he shares on today's podcast, is remarkable. Just out of fellowship, Naheed built a palliative care program for homeless persons called the Palliative Education and Care for the Homeless (PEACH) Program. This podcast is a complement to our prior podcast on aging and homelessness with Margot Kushel. Today we discuss:

  • What is the best terminology? Homeless? Homelessness? Houseless? Marginally housed?

  • What makes palliative care for people experiencing homelessness challenging? What makes it rewarding?

  • What is unique about the practice of palliative care for people experiencing homelessness? We discuss the principles of harm reduction, social determinants of health, and trauma informed care. Major overlap with substance use disorder issues, which we have covered recently (and frequently) on this podcast.

  • How are the health systems designed or not designed to meet the needs of people experiencing homelessness?

  • What are the equity issues at stake, and at risk of being cut, both in Canada and the US?

Many more links below. And I had a blast playing Blinding Lights by that Toronto band The Weekend.

Enjoy!

-Alex

End Well Talk

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eG4QE-hfPQU

Resources on the PEACH Program