TY - JOUR
T1 - Barriers for adult patients to access palliative care in hospitals: A mixed methods systematic review.
T2 - A Mixed Methods Systematic Review
AU - Pitzer, Stefan
AU - Kutschar, Patrick
AU - Paal, Piret
AU - Mülleder, Patrick
AU - Lorenzl, Stefan
AU - Wosko, Paulina
AU - Osterbrink, Jürgen
AU - Bükki, Johannes
N1 - Pitzer, Kutschar, Mülleder, Osterbrink, Bükki: WHO Collaborating Centre for Nursing Research and Education, Institute of Nursing Science and Practice, Paracelsus Medical Private University, Salzburg, Austria; Paal, Lorenz: Institute of Palliative Care, Paracelsus Medical Private University, Salzburg, Austria.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - BACKGROUND: Access to palliative care services is variable, and many inpatients do not receive palliative care. An overview of potential barriers could facilitate the development of strategies to overcome factors that impede access for patients with palliative care needs.AIM: To review the current evidence on barriers that impair, delay, or prohibit access to palliative care for adult hospital inpatients.DESIGN: A mixed methods systematic review was conducted using an integrated convergent approach and thematic synthesis (PROSPERO ID: CRD42021279477).DATA SOURCES: The Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, CINAHL, and PsycINFO were searched from 10/2003 to 12/2020. Studies with evidence of barriers for inpatients to access existing palliative care services were eligible and reviewed.RESULTS: After an initial screening of 3,359 records and 555 full-texts, 79 studies were included. Thematic synthesis yielded 149 access-related phenomena in 6 main categories: 1) Sociodemographic characteristics, 2) Health-related characteristics, 3) Individual beliefs and attitudes, 4) Interindividual cooperation and support, 5) Availability and allocation of resources, and 6) Emotional and prognostic challenges. While evidence was inconclusive for most socio-demographic factors, the following barriers emerged: having a noncancer condition or a low symptom burden, the focus on cure in hospitals, nonacceptance of terminal prognosis, negative perceptions of palliative care, misleading communication and conflicting care preferences, lack of resources, poor coordination, insufficient expertise, and clinicians' emotional discomfort and difficult prognostication.CONCLUSION: Hospital inpatients face multiple barriers to accessing palliative care. Strategies to address these barriers need to take into account their multidimensionality and long-standing persistence.
AB - BACKGROUND: Access to palliative care services is variable, and many inpatients do not receive palliative care. An overview of potential barriers could facilitate the development of strategies to overcome factors that impede access for patients with palliative care needs.AIM: To review the current evidence on barriers that impair, delay, or prohibit access to palliative care for adult hospital inpatients.DESIGN: A mixed methods systematic review was conducted using an integrated convergent approach and thematic synthesis (PROSPERO ID: CRD42021279477).DATA SOURCES: The Cochrane Library, MEDLINE, CINAHL, and PsycINFO were searched from 10/2003 to 12/2020. Studies with evidence of barriers for inpatients to access existing palliative care services were eligible and reviewed.RESULTS: After an initial screening of 3,359 records and 555 full-texts, 79 studies were included. Thematic synthesis yielded 149 access-related phenomena in 6 main categories: 1) Sociodemographic characteristics, 2) Health-related characteristics, 3) Individual beliefs and attitudes, 4) Interindividual cooperation and support, 5) Availability and allocation of resources, and 6) Emotional and prognostic challenges. While evidence was inconclusive for most socio-demographic factors, the following barriers emerged: having a noncancer condition or a low symptom burden, the focus on cure in hospitals, nonacceptance of terminal prognosis, negative perceptions of palliative care, misleading communication and conflicting care preferences, lack of resources, poor coordination, insufficient expertise, and clinicians' emotional discomfort and difficult prognostication.CONCLUSION: Hospital inpatients face multiple barriers to accessing palliative care. Strategies to address these barriers need to take into account their multidimensionality and long-standing persistence.
KW - Adult
KW - Humans
KW - Palliative Care/methods
KW - Hospitals
KW - Inpatients
KW - Communication
U2 - 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2023.09.012
DO - 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2023.09.012
M3 - Review article
C2 - 37717708
SN - 0885-3924
VL - 67
SP - e16-e33
JO - JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT
JF - JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT
IS - 1
ER -