The project is one of two new projects that will look at how to
best organise and deliver healthcare services in palliative care and epilepsy.
‘Each of these projects aims to
provide solid evidence that will support the development of the best models of
care in their respective areas’, says Graham Love, the Chief Executive of the
HRB. ‘Over the past few years, the HRB,
HSE and Royal College of Physicians in Ireland have made a focussed,
coordinated effort to increase the level of funding available for quality and
patient safety research that addresses knowledge gaps of national priority.
These two projects are the latest ones to come through that process’.
According
to Professor Charles Normand, Trinity College Dublin, who will be conducting
detailed research into what are the best models of palliative care in an Irish
context;
‘We do
not know enough about the extent to which better provision of palliative care
takes pressure off other health and social care. Nor do we know enough about
the effects of different models of palliative care on the burden on families
and informal care givers. There are
a lot of important and as yet unanswered questions regarding the strengths and
weaknesses of different models of care, the extent to which those that cost
more achieve more, and the differences in experiences and outcomes.'
Dr Mary Fitzsimons, from Beaumont Hospital will lead
the project on patient-centred epilepsy care.
These latest awards will join two ongoing projects in
Emergency medicine and Rheumatology care that have been funded under this
partnership scheme, the RCQPS (the Research Collaboration on Quality andPatient Safety). To date over €1.5 million has been committed to research
under this specific scheme.
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