Community-based palliative care needs and barriers to access among cancer patients in rural north India: a Participatory action research.

IF 2.5 2区 医学 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES BMC Palliative Care Pub Date : 2024-10-09 DOI:10.1186/s12904-024-01572-7
Mayank Gupta, Ankita Kankaria, Liya E Joshy, Sandeep Singh, Bhajan Lal, Subhash Choudhary, Sapna Marcus, Anju Grewal, Lajya Devi Goyal, Rakesh Kakkar
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Abstract

Background: This paper aimed to explore the palliative care (PC) needs and barriers to access among cancer patients in a rural region of North India with a high cancer burden.

Methods: A Participatory action research (PAR) approach was employed. Situational assessment, community sensitization workshops (CSWs) and door-to-door surveys were planned, conducted and developed over three PAR cycles. A parallel convergent mixed-methods approach was adopted wherein the quantitative data from door-to-door surveys and qualitative data from CSWs and investigator field notes were collected and analyzed to provide a comprehensive understanding of PC needs and barriers to access. Descriptive statistics and thematic analysis were used.

Results: A total of 27 CSWs involving 526 stakeholders were conducted. A total of 256 cancer patients were assessed for PC needs and symptom burden using the Supportive and Palliative Care Indicators (SPICT-4ALL) and the Edmonton Symptom Assessment System (ESAS) tool, respectively. Based on the SPICT assessment, all patients (n = 256) satisfied general and/or cancer-specific indicators for PC. The majority (56.6%) had ≥ one moderate-severe symptom, with the most common symptoms being tiredness, pain and loss of appetite. Analysis of qualitative findings generated three themes: unmet needs, burden of caregiving, and barriers and challenges. Cancer affected all domains of patients' and their families' lives, contributing to biopsychosocial suffering. Social stigma, discrimination, sympathizing attitudes and lack of emotional and material support contributed to psychosocial suffering among cancer patients and their caregivers. Lack of awareness, nearby healthcare facilities, transportation, essential medicines, trained manpower and education in PC, collusion, fear of social discrimination, faulty perceptions and misconceptions about cancer made access to PC difficult.

Conclusions: The study emphasize the need for and provide a roadmap for developing context-specific and culturally appropriate CBPC services to address the identified challenges and needs. The findings point towards education of CHWs in PC; improving community awareness about cancer, PC, government support schemes; ensuring an uninterrupted supply of essential medicines; and developing active linkages within the community and with NGOs to address the financial, transportation, educational, vocational and other social needs as some of the strategies to ensure holistic CBPC services.

Trial registration: Clinical Trial Registry of India (CTRI/2023/04/051357).

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印度北部农村地区癌症患者基于社区的姑息治疗需求和获取障碍:参与式行动研究。
背景:本文旨在探讨北印度一个癌症负担较重的农村地区癌症患者的姑息关怀(PC)需求和获得姑息关怀的障碍:方法:采用参与式行动研究(PAR)方法。方法:采用了参与式行动研究(PAR)方法,在三个参与式行动研究周期内规划、开展和发展了情况评估、社区宣传研讨会(CSWs)和逐户调查。采用了一种平行趋同的混合方法,收集并分析了逐户调查的定量数据、社区宣传工作坊的定性数据以及调查人员的实地记录,以全面了解个人计算机的需求和使用障碍。研究采用了描述性统计和主题分析方法:共进行了 27 次 CSW,涉及 526 名利益相关者。共使用支持性姑息治疗指标(SPICT-4ALL)和埃德蒙顿症状评估系统(ESAS)工具对 256 名癌症患者的个人护理需求和症状负担进行了评估。根据 SPICT 评估结果,所有患者(n = 256)均符合 PC 的一般和/或癌症特异性指标。大多数患者(56.6%)有≥一种中度-重度症状,最常见的症状是疲倦、疼痛和食欲不振。对定性结果的分析产生了三个主题:未满足的需求、护理负担以及障碍和挑战。癌症影响了患者及其家人生活的方方面面,造成了生物心理社会方面的痛苦。社会耻辱感、歧视、同情态度以及情感和物质支持的缺乏,都加重了癌症患者及其护理人员的心理社会痛苦。由于缺乏认识、附近的医疗设施、交通、基本药物、受过培训的人员和 PC 教育、串通、害怕社会歧视、对癌症的错误认识和误解,导致难以获得 PC:这项研究强调了发展针对具体情况和文化背景的 CBPC 服务的必要性,并提供了路线图,以应对已确定的挑战和需求。研究结果表明,对社区保健工作者进行 PC 教育;提高社区对癌症、PC 和政府支持计划的认识;确保基本药物的不间断供应;以及在社区内并与非政府组织建立积极的联系,以满足财务、交通、教育、职业和其他社会需求,是确保提供全面 CBPC 服务的一些策略:试验登记:印度临床试验登记处(CTRI/2023/04/051357)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
BMC Palliative Care
BMC Palliative Care HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES-
CiteScore
4.60
自引率
9.70%
发文量
201
审稿时长
21 weeks
期刊介绍: BMC Palliative Care is an open access journal publishing original peer-reviewed research articles in the clinical, scientific, ethical and policy issues, local and international, regarding all aspects of hospice and palliative care for the dying and for those with profound suffering related to chronic illness.
期刊最新文献
Communication about incurable illness and remaining life between spouses and patients with incurable illness receiving specialized home care: effects of a family caregiver-targeted web-based psycho-educational intervention. Correction: Adapting the serious illness conversation guide for unhoused older adults: a rapid qualitative study. Online education in palliative care - A national exploratory multimethod study. The family talk intervention prevent the feeling of loneliness - a long term follow up after a parents life-threatening illness. Is the use of antibiotic stewardship measures in the context of specialized outpatient palliative care sensible and feasible? An interview-based study.
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