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Volume 8

Journal of Palliative Care & Medicine

Hospice 2018

July 18-19, 2018

July 18-19, 2018 Melbourne, Australia

5

th

World Congress on

Hospice and Palliative Care

Sven Jennessen, J Palliat Care Med 2018, Volume 8

DOI: 10.4172/2165-7386-C1-014

Quality advancement of children's and youth hospice work in Germany with QuinK

Sven Jennessen

Humboldt University Berlin, Germany

G

ermany, children’s and youth hospice work is a very dynamic field which, during the last 25 years, has continued to

establish, develop and professionalize itself in the German hospice and palliative movement. Since 2015, impulses for

quality advancement are given by the “Qualitätsindex für Kinder-und Jugendhospitzarbeit” (QuinK), a non-standardized

questionnaire tool which was developed by a research team in cooperation with the Deutsche Hospiz- und PalliativVerband e.

V. (DHPV). The process of growth and professionalization in children's and youth hospice work is illustrated by the growing

number of inpatient children's and youth hospice establishments and home care services beginning to focus more on the

needs of teenagers and young adults with life-shortening diseases. It networks closely with the equally fast-growing structures

of pediatric palliative care and finds itself in the center of different interests and perspectives of health care, children's and

youth aid, disabled people's aid and palliative care. Therefore, it is essential to focus on one’s own objectives and tasks in

establishing a closely-knit support network in order to guide children and youths with life-shortening diseases as well as their

families. The preservation and continuous advancement of the quality of the work is a primary concern of children's and youth

hospice work so that existing and future challenges can be met with confidence. As a non-standardized and yet very empirical

instrument, QuinK can be understood as an opportunity for all contributors to critically reflect on their work from their

own perspectives, and compare their work to the goals and principles of QuinK as well as initiate advancements within the

individual establishments. It is conceivable and explicitly desired that QuinK be adapted beyond the German children's and

youth hospice movement to the specific conditions and structures in other countries.

Biography

Sven Jennessen has his expertise in children's and youth hospice work and in palliative care for people with disabilities. He has developed the instrument QuinK

after years of experience in research, evaluation and teaching. He is a Professor for Pedagogy for people with physical disabilities and has another research focus

on aspects of sexual self-determination of people with disabilities.

sven.jennessen@hu-berlin.de