«A shortage of oral morphine in Egypt»: الفرق بين المراجعتين

من ويكيتعمر
اذهب إلى: تصفح، ابحث
سطر 1: سطر 1:
  
 
A shortage of oral morphine in Egypt
 
A shortage of oral morphine in Egypt
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 +
Bull World Health Organ 2016;94:3 | doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.15.156240<ref>http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/94/1/15-156240.pdf</ref>
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Samy A Alsirafy & Dina E Faraga
 
Samy A Alsirafy & Dina E Faraga
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==م==
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Egypt, with more than 88 million residents
 +
in 2015 and an estimated 5-year
 +
cancer prevalence of more than 215 000
 +
cases in 2012,1,2
 +
has effectively no oral
 +
morphine. The lack of effective and
 +
affordable analgesia is catastrophic for
 +
people with end-stage cancer. Breast,
 +
liver and bladder cancers are the most
 +
common types of cancer in Egypt, and
 +
about half of cancer patients in the
 +
eastern Mediterranean Region only
 +
visit a physician when their cancer
 +
has reached an advanced – and often
 +
incurable – stage.2,3
 +
For these patients,
 +
the focus of care is quality of life and
 +
the only realistic treatment option is
 +
palliative care.4
 +
Medical treatment is the main element
 +
in cancer pain management and
 +
for most patients, relatively inexpensive
 +
drugs like morphine are effective.5
 +
For many years, morphine has been on
 +
the World Health Organization (WHO)
 +
model list of essential medicines as
 +
the strong opioid of choice because
 +
of its suitability for ma
  
Bull World Health Organ 2016;94:3 | doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.15.156240
 
  
http://www.who.int/bulletin/volumes/94/1/15-156240.pdf
 
  
 +
{{مراجع}}
 
[[تصنيف:رعاية المسنين في مصر]]
 
[[تصنيف:رعاية المسنين في مصر]]
 
[[تصنيف:رعاية تلطيفية]]
 
[[تصنيف:رعاية تلطيفية]]

مراجعة 08:39، 9 أكتوبر 2017

A shortage of oral morphine in Egypt

Bull World Health Organ 2016;94:3 | doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.2471/BLT.15.156240[1]


Samy A Alsirafy & Dina E Faraga

م

Egypt, with more than 88 million residents in 2015 and an estimated 5-year cancer prevalence of more than 215 000 cases in 2012,1,2

has effectively no oral

morphine. The lack of effective and affordable analgesia is catastrophic for people with end-stage cancer. Breast, liver and bladder cancers are the most common types of cancer in Egypt, and about half of cancer patients in the eastern Mediterranean Region only visit a physician when their cancer has reached an advanced – and often incurable – stage.2,3

For these patients,

the focus of care is quality of life and the only realistic treatment option is palliative care.4 Medical treatment is the main element in cancer pain management and for most patients, relatively inexpensive drugs like morphine are effective.5 For many years, morphine has been on the World Health Organization (WHO) model list of essential medicines as the strong opioid of choice because of its suitability for ma