IMPROVING CANCER PAIN RELIEF
IN THE WORLD: 2000

A Report

World Health Organization
Collaborating Center for Policy and
Communications in Cancer Care

Sponsored by


The Pain & Policy Studies Group
University of Wisconsin Comprehensive Cancer Center
The Medical School
Madison, Wisconsin USA
www.medsch.wisc.edu/painpolicy

 

September 2001


Table of Contents

Executive Summary     The Center and its WHO Terms of Reference     Staff Members   Acknowledgements


Executive Summary

 

This report summarizes the work of the World Health Organization (WHO) Collaborating Center for Policy and Communications in Cancer Care. The Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) designated the Center in 1995. The Center is sponsored by the Pain & Policy Studies Group of the University of Wisconsin Comprehensive Cancer Center in the Medical School, Madison, Wisconsin, U.S.A.

In 2000, the Center collaborated with WHO - Geneva, Department of Essential Drugs & Medicines Policy (Project Officer: Mr. T. Yoshida) to finalize and issue Achieving Balance in National Opioids Control Policy: Guidelines for Assessment ("WHO Guidelines"). The WHO Guidelines can be used by governments and health-care professionals to evaluate national narcotics control policy for "balance," i.e., to determine if a government's national narcotics control law, regulations and administration have the capability of ensuring the availability of opioid analgesics as is required of governments which are parties to the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs, 1961.1

The Center, the Non-Communicable Diseases Program of PAHO, and the WHO Program of Essential Drugs and Medicines Policy in Geneva sponsored a workshop on opioid availability for palliative care in December 2000 in Quito, Ecuador. Teams of health professionals attended, representing cancer control, palliative care, essential drugs, and narcotics control from six Andean countries: Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Ecuador, Perú, and Venezuela. The goal of the workshop was to develop an action plan to improve opioid availability in each country. Using the new WHO Guidelines as a framework, participants discussed the purposes and functions of international treaties and national drug control laws, and developed improved mutual understanding of the needs for opioids for palliative care.

In 2000, the Center consulted with the International Narcotics Control Board (INCB) about the international and national opioid availability situation and used INCB opioid consumption data to monitor progress or lack of it in a number of countries. The Center collaborated with national governments on a range of projects, as well as with non-governmental organizations in Asia, Latin America and Europe.

The Center sponsors a WHO Demonstration Project in India to show how countries can make opioids available for the relief of pain in dying patients living at home, without diversion and abuse. In addition, four more morphine availability workshops were held in India in 2000 to simplify state regulations.

The Center accomplishes its policy work through a program of research, development, demonstration, monitoring and evaluation. The Center develops methods, procedures and models that can be used to identify barriers to opioid availability, diagnose regulatory problems, make changes in national and state policy, and monitor outcomes.

The Center accomplishes its communications work primarily through the publication of Cancer Pain Release, a quarterly WHO newsletter that provides health professionals, policy makers, and regulators throughout the world with updates on issues and developments in the field. Cancer Pain Release has a world-wide circulation of 100,000 in 160 countries and is inserted in several medical journals.

Every year, the Center also participates in a number of international and national conferences and strategy meetings for health professionals and government officials, and provides technical assistance to government and non-government organizations. The Center maintains two websites and promotes worldwide access to better understand the principles that should guide national narcotics control policy.

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The Center and its WHO Terms of Reference

 

Name of Center: The World Health Organization Collaborating Center for Policy and Communications in Cancer Care, Pain & Policy Studies Group, Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of Wisconsin Medical School

Address:                   406 Science Drive, Suite 202
                                Madison, Wisconsin, 53711-1068, USA
                                Telephone: 1 608 263 7662
                                Facsimile: 1 608 263 0259
                                Email: joranson@facstaff.wisc.edu
                                Websites:    http://www.medsch.wisc.edu/painpolicy
   
                                                http://www.WHOcancerpain.wisc.edu

Director: David E. Joranson, MSSW, Senior Scientist, Pain & Policy Studies Group

Terms of reference for the Collaborating Center:

    To develop methods to identify impediments to the availability of opioid analgesics; compare national approaches to opioid analgesic regulation; develop
    procedures to monitor the medical use and diversion of opioids before and after national cancer pain and palliative care policies are implemented.

    Develop WHO Demonstration Projects to make opioids available for cancer pain relief while minimizing diversion.

    To monitor development of national cancer pain relief and palliative care programs according to WHO's three measures of national policy, opioid availability 
    and educational programs.

    To maintain a communication network for the WHO Cancer Pain Relief and Palliative Care Program, including publication of a WHO/PAHO, Global Cancer
    Care newsletter to be distributed throughout the world, and a computer-based telecommunication system giving professionals the opportunity to access and
    share information.

    Establish a comprehensive database of resources available to educate cancer patients about pain control and palliative care and configure the information so 
    that it can be easily retrievable.

 

 

 

Madison, Wisconsin, USA
September 20, 2001
Dj_sig.jpg (1860 bytes)
David E. Joranson
Director

*A report of Center activities from1997-1999 is available at http://www.medsch.wisc.edu/painpolicy/00ppsgar/00ppsgar.html


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Pain & Policy Studies Group
WHO Collaborating Center

Staff Members



David E. Joranson, MSSW, Director

Sophie M. Colleau, PhD, Editor, Cancer Pain Release

Aaron M. Gilson, PhD, Researcher in Policy Studies

Carolyn M. Williams, BS, MBA, Research Program Administrator

Karen M. Ryan, MA, Senior Policy Analyst

Martha A. Maurer, BS, Policy Analyst

John M. Nelson, MS, Information Processing Consultant

Linda L. Gorman, Administrative Assistant


 


Acknowledgements



The Center wishes to acknowledge the cooperation of the following individuals: Professor M.R. Rajagopal, Director of the Pain and Palliative Care Society and WHO Demonstration Project, Calicut, India; Mr. Romesh Bhattacharji, Narcotics Commissioner of India, Gwalior, India; Mr. Kailash Sethi, former Narcotics Commissioner of India, New Delhi, India; and Dr. Fumikazu Takeda, Ex Officio Director of the Saitama Cancer Center and WHO Collaborating Center, Saitama, Japan.

Top    Table of Contents

Executive Summary     The Center and its WHO Terms of Reference