Skip to content

Clinical Aspects of Palliative Care for Registered Nurses – Spring 2025

Thank you for your interest. Unfortunately, this course is now fully booked. If you would like to be notified when new dates are confirmed, please select ‘Register Interest’ during the application process, and we will contact you as soon as further information becomes available.

This six-week course is designed to enhance Registered Nurses’ knowledge and skills in the clinical aspects of palliative care.

The course covers essential topics, including symptom management, evidence-based practices, and the core principles of palliative care. Through a combination of theoretical learning and practical insights, nurses will have the opportunity to deepen their understanding of current palliative care practices, ensuring the delivery of compassionate, effective care.

The course offers valuable Continuing Professional Development (CPD) hours (which can be used for NMC revalidation purposes) and enables participants to gain theoretical and clinical knowledge to support high-quality care in palliative settings.

Clinical Aspects of Palliative Care for Registered Nurses – Course Programme
Week Date Time Session Topics
1 28/05/2025 09:30-12:30 Philosophies & Principles of Palliative Care

This workshop is suitable for those who have an interest in care of the very ill, dying and bereaved; and who wish to gain foundation knowledge in palliative care:

• What is Palliative Care?
• Who is Palliative Care for?
• The ethos of Palliative Care
• Models of death and dying and their relevance to practice

13:00-16:00 Principles of Symptom Control

This workshop will help you gain knowledge, skills and understanding of symptom assessment and general principles underpinning our approach to providing holistic palliative symptom control:

• Symptom patterns and prevalence
• Personality and symptoms
• Principles of symptom control
• Symptom assessment

2 06/06/2025 09:30-12:30 Gastrointestinal Symptoms & Their Management

This session is designed to enhance your knowledge and practice in helping palliative care patients and their families manage these complex and often underrated difficulties which may have a major impact on quality of life:

• Oral problems
• Nausea and vomiting
• Intestinal obstruction
• Constipation

13:00-16:00 Respiratory Symptoms & Their Management

One of the key focus points of this session is the role we may be able to play in helping with or mitigating against particularly distressing and emotive symptoms:

• Cough / hiccoughs
• Dyspnoea
• Haemoptysis
• Coping and management strategies

3 11/06/2025 09:30-12:30 Pain – Types. Assessment & Management

This day is aimed at those whose roles involve caring for people who have to face and cope with pain. The session will help you gain knowledge, skills and understanding of both the problems and a range of care and treatment strategies:

  • Pain assessment
  • Pain theories and pain mechanisms
  • Concepts of pain
  • Acute and chronic pain – aspects for practice with palliative care patients
  • Palliative pain management strategies
  • Non-drug management
  • Drug management
13:00-16:00 Pain – Application of Principles to Practice
4 20/06/2025 09:30-12:30 Non-Malignant Organ Disease 1

During this session, we will consider issues relevant to palliation of organ disease and will have opportunity to examine the impact of such diagnosis/transitions of care for professionals, patients and their family members. We will explore:

• Renal disease
• Liver disease

13:00-16:00 Non-Malignant Organ Disease 2

As with the morning’s session, we will consider issues relevant to palliation of organ disease and will have opportunity to examine the impact of such diagnosis/transitions of care for professionals, patients and their family members. We will explore:

• Heart disease
• Transitions in care

5 25/06/2025 09:30-12:30 Palliation & Neurological Conditions

Neurological disease presents us with a raft of practical, clinical and ethical problems. The aim of this event is to consider how, when and where palliative care begins and fits in with other supportive care elements:

• Ethical considerations oof treatment
• Parkinson’s disease
• Multiple sclerosis
• Motor neurone disease
• Other neurological conditions

13:00-16:00 Palliation & Dementia

This event offers an opportunity to review the palliative care needs in a group of people for whom assessment and communication present us with significant challenges:

• Dementia – who do we mean?
• Aims of care and transitionary processes / Individual assessment in cognitive impairment
• Managing symptoms / Maintaining personhood / Supporting families

6 04/07/2025 09:30-12:30 Clinical Emergencies in Palliative Care

Even within the context of palliative care some situations are emergencies. What are they? Can we prevent them? How do we manage them? What consequences do they hold? The aim of this session is to address these questions and explore practical and non-practical issues which need to be considered:

• Hypercalcaemia of malignancy
• Superior vena cava obstruction
• Haemorrhage
• Fits
• Malignant spinal cord compression
• Fractures

13:00-16:00 Identifying & Managing the Final Phases of Life

• Maximising physical comfort (including symptom management aspects)
• Psychosocial care for the individual and the family
• Offering spiritual care – not just ‘do you want your vicar to call?’
• Care in context – national and political influences on local services and configuration
• Self-preservation and therapeutic caring – impossible balance?

 

Course Details
When:
28 May 2025, 09:30 – 16:00
06 June 2025, 09:30 – 16:00
11 June 2025, 09:30 – 16:00
20 June 2025, 09:30 – 16:00
25 June 2025, 09:30 – 16:00
04 July 2025, 09:30 – 16:00
Course type:
Clinical Aspects of Palliative Care for Registered Nurses
Location:
St Michael's Hospice, Bartestree, Hereford, HR1 4HA
Length of course:
6 Sessions (over a 6 week period)
Price:
£10.00 Per Week