Thursday, February 12, 2026
ADVT 
India

Why Kerala Is The Best Place To Die In India

Darpan News Desk IANS, 17 Oct, 2015 01:20 PM
    It's been sold as God's Own Country. Over the years, its verdant landscape and attractive beaches have enticed millions of visitors from the rest of India and abroad. Its tourism industry projects celebration of life as its underlying ethos.
     
    Now, Kerala is offering itself as the best place to die. The state boasts of being far ahead in palliative care in India. Its approach has been fine-tuned over the years by policymakers, health experts and civil society activists.
     
    "Today palliative care has become a social movement in the state and the latest to join the bandwagon is the CPI-M, which has asked its cadres to form palliative cares in as many places as possible," eminent oncologist, V.P.Gangadharan told IANS.
     
    Kerala's efforts received a feather in its cap when Singapore-based Lien Foundation praised the state's provision of palliative care for patients with serious illnesses, in its 40-country Quality of Death study recently.
     
    "While India ranks at the bottom of the Index in overall score and performs badly on many indicators, Kerala, if measured on the same points, would buck the trend," said the 'Quality of Death: Ranking end-of-life care across the world' report.
     
    "With only three percent of India's population, the state provides two-thirds of India's palliative care services," the report released earlier this week stated.
     
    Gangadharan, who is considered to be the darling of cancer patients, said this was bound to happen as Kerala had a sound foundation in basic healthcare.
     
    According to A.C.Kurian, retired Christian priest and honorary director of the Pain and Palliative Care Society under the Pushapagiri Hospital in Thiruvalla, the success of the care is because of the infrastructure and team work.
     
    "The hospital provides the infrastructure, including a ward, four doctors and 10 nurses for free. And there are a large number of volunteers," he said.
     
     
    They provide treatment to the weaker sections of society suffering from terminal ailments. Also, through extension activities, the family members of a patient who dies are also helped.
     
    Kerala is also one of India's first states to relax narcotics regulations to permit use of morphine by palliative care providers.
     
    M.R. Rajagopal, chairman of Pallium India, a charitable trust promoting palliative care, laments the lack of funding in India for end-of-life care services. However, Rajagopal was quoted as saying by the report that money was not the only answer to relieve suffering and improving quality of life for those in the last stages of their lives.
     
    Kerala's unique system revolves around the Neighbourhood Network in Palliative Care (NNPC) project, co-founded by Suresh Kumar, with the aim of improving both accessibility and quality of end-of-life care.
     
    Former State Finance Minister and senior CPI-M legislator Thomas Issac says the current status had been reached because of innovative thinking. "With decentralisation of powers in the late nineties, every local body was directed to allocate a portion of its funds for innovative health schemes. Today most such bodies have an allocation for palliative care, Issac told IANS.
     
    According to the report Britain tops in overall score while Australia and New Zealand hold the second and third spots, respectively. India is ranked last in overall scores at 40. China ranks 37.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Delhi To Launch Drive Against Overloaded Vehicles

    Delhi To Launch Drive Against Overloaded Vehicles
    Delhi Transport Minister Gopal Rai on Monday said the Delhi transport department in collaboration with the transport departments of Uttar Pradesh and Haryana will conduct a drive against overloaded vehicles from April 15.

    Delhi To Launch Drive Against Overloaded Vehicles

    A Kashmiri Home We Left Behind 25 Years Ago - For Good

    A Kashmiri Home We Left Behind 25 Years Ago - For Good
    I have always found it tedious to answer the question: "Which is your hometown?" Not because I am a daughter of an army officer or belong to a family of travellers, but because "I was born in Srinagar and was brought up in Jammu." 

    A Kashmiri Home We Left Behind 25 Years Ago - For Good

    What Made These Indian Entrepreneurs Corporate Giants?

    What Made These Indian Entrepreneurs Corporate Giants?
    In early 2000, Ratan Tata, now the Tata Group's chairman emeritus, told journalists that he wanted to create an affordable four-wheeler for two-wheeler users who couldn't afford a car. That vision was developed into the Tata Nano.

    What Made These Indian Entrepreneurs Corporate Giants?

    Rahul's Absence Puts Question Marks On His Elevation

    Rahul's Absence Puts Question Marks On His Elevation
    Congress vice-president Rahul Gandhi's long "leave of absence" appears to have accentuated the debate in the Congress on his possible elevation with clear differences among party leaders on the issue. 

    Rahul's Absence Puts Question Marks On His Elevation

    Revoke Muslims' Voting Right: Shiv Sena

    Revoke Muslims' Voting Right: Shiv Sena
    Voting rights of Muslims should be revoked to stop vote-bank politics, Shiv Sena leader Sanjay Raut has said in an article slamming AIMIM leaders Asaduddin and Akbaruddin Owaisi for polarising the community.

    Revoke Muslims' Voting Right: Shiv Sena

    Congress Dares Modi To Declassify Documents On Netaji

    Congress Dares Modi To Declassify Documents On Netaji
    The Congress on Sunday termed the news reports suggesting snooping of family of Netaji Subhas Chandra Bose "motivated news plants based on selected and mischievous leaks" and dared Prime Minister Narendra Modi to declassify all documents relating to the freedom fighter.

    Congress Dares Modi To Declassify Documents On Netaji