Public, patient and carers’ views on palliative and end-of-life care in India
Authors
Pallipalayam Varatharajan RRamasamy Venkatasalu, M.
Sirala Jagadeesh, N.
Elavally, S.
Pappas, Yannis
Mhlanga, Fortune
Issue Date
2017-08-30Subjects
palliative care
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Aim: To systematically review the existing evidence on the Indian public, patient and carers’ perspectives on palliative and end-of-life care. Background: With a growing population of terminally ill people across the world, there is also an increasing awareness among international health policy makers of the need to improve the quality of life for terminally ill patients. Understanding service users’ (patients, family and public) perspectives is crucial in developing and sustaining successful community-centred palliative nursing policies and service models especially in countries like India with diverse population. Methods: An integrative review was performed on five databases, using hand searches of key journals and reference citation tracking for empirical studies published in English from 1990 to 2015. A thematic analysis framework was used to analyse and identify key themes. Results: Analysis of the six eligible studies revealed five themes. Themes describe how social, economic, cultural, religious, spiritual and traditional factors influenced the palliative and end-of-life care perspectives and experiences among Indians. They also illustrated preferences relating to place of care, as well as benefits and challenges of family caregiving during the last days of life. Conclusions: Although we found minimal evidence on user perspectives, nurses need to aware of those unique components of context-specific palliative and end-of-life care practices in India – socioeconomic, cultural and religious factors – on their nursing encounters. Nurses need to advocate same in policy development to enable accessibility and utility of palliative and end-of-life care services, which are scant in India. Implications for nursing and health policy: Nurses can be central in gathering the contextual evidence that advocate users’ perspectives to inform further studies and national palliative care policies in India. Emerging policies in nursing education need to focus on integrating family-centred palliative and end-of-life care within curricula, whereas nursing practice may promote nurse-led community models to address the patchy palliative and end-of-life service provision in India.Citation
Ramasamy Venkatasalu M, Sirala Jagadeesh N, Elavally S, Pappas Y, Mhlanga F, Pallipalayam Varatharajan R (2018) 'Public, patient and carers’ views on palliative and end-of-life care in India', International Nursing Review, 65 (2), pp.292-301.Publisher
Blackwell Publishing LtdJournal
International Nursing ReviewPubMed ID
28856680Additional Links
https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1111/inr.12403Type
ArticleLanguage
enISSN
0020-8132ae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1111/inr.12403
Scopus Count
Collections
Related articles
- Palliative care experiences of adult cancer patients from ethnocultural groups: a qualitative systematic review protocol.
- Authors: Busolo D, Woodgate R
- Issue date: 2015 Jan
- Palliative and end-of-life care in prisons: a content analysis of the literature.
- Authors: Maschi T, Marmo S, Han J
- Issue date: 2014
- Psychosocial care provision for terminally ill clients in rural Australian communities: the role of social work.
- Authors: Johns LL, McAuliffe D, Dorsett P
- Issue date: 2019 Sep
- Thinking ahead about medical treatments in advanced illness: a qualitative study of barriers and enablers in end-of-life care planning with patients and families from ethnically diverse backgrounds.
- Authors: Islam Z, Pollock K, Patterson A, Hanjari M, Wallace L, Mururajani I, Conroy S, Faull C
- Issue date: 2023 Jun
- Caring for terminally ill Muslim patients: Lived experiences of non-Muslim nurses.
- Authors: Abudari G, Hazeim H, Ginete G
- Issue date: 2016 Dec