Using relational ethics to approach equity in palliative care.

IF 2.7 Q2 HEALTH CARE SCIENCES & SERVICES Palliative Care and Social Practice Pub Date : 2024-11-07 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1177/26323524241293820
Kristina A Smith, Kelli Stajduhar
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Abstract

Evidence suggests that people experiencing inequities and who are highly marginalized (e.g., people impacted by racism, sexism, discrimination, stigma, mental illness, substance use issues, disability, and the effects of homelessness; also referred to as structurally vulnerable individuals) often die alone, in pain, and not receiving the care they need. Some research even points to highly marginalized people not feeling worthy of care. The need to consider equity in the context of palliative care has recently emerged but little attention has been paid to how ethical decision-making generally, and relational ethics, specifically, could provide guidance in the care of highly marginalized people who are on a palliative trajectory. Relational ethics offers a model of care and decision-making framework that emphasizes how clients, healthcare providers, and larger social structures are interwoven and acknowledge that structural conditions can position people to have less choice than others. Relational approaches in the context of palliative care for highly marginalized people have the potential to provide a lens to better support the delivery of equitable palliative care. This critical essay explores relational ethics as a way to approach equity in palliative care to support clients facing structural vulnerabilities. We discuss relational ethical considerations to approach collaborative partnerships between clients, healthcare providers, and the larger community with the goal of aligning care with clients' values. An ethical case for how a relational ethics approach might be used to promote equitable access to palliative care will be explored, highlighting how such approaches have the potential to better align client wishes with their needs and to ensure decision-making and care delivery is trauma-informed, harm reduction focused, and culturally respectful. Relational ethics can support social change in equity and palliative care by contributing ethically informed ways of caring for/with/about highly marginalized people.

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在姑息关怀中运用关系伦理来实现公平。
有证据表明,遭受不公平待遇和高度边缘化的人(例如,受种族主义、性别歧视、歧视、污名化、精神疾病、药物使用问题、残疾和无家可归影响的人;也被称为结构脆弱的个人)往往是在痛苦中孤独地死去,得不到他们需要的护理。一些研究甚至指出,高度边缘化的人群认为自己不值得被照顾。在姑息关怀的背景下考虑公平性的必要性最近已经出现,但很少有人关注伦理决策,特别是关系伦理学,如何为处于姑息关怀轨迹上的高度边缘化人群的关怀提供指导。关系伦理学提供了一种护理模式和决策框架,强调客户、医疗服务提供者和更大的社会结构是如何相互交织在一起的,并承认结构性条件会使人们比其他人拥有更少的选择权。在为高度边缘化人群提供姑息关怀的背景下,关系方法有可能为更好地支持提供公平的姑息关怀提供一个视角。这篇批判性文章探讨了关系伦理学,将其作为姑息关怀中实现公平的一种方法,以支持面临结构性弱势的服务对象。我们讨论了在客户、医疗服务提供者和更大的社区之间建立合作关系的关系伦理考虑因素,目的是使关怀符合客户的价值观。我们将探讨如何利用关系伦理学方法来促进公平地获得姑息关怀的伦理案例,强调这种方法如何有可能更好地将客户的愿望与他们的需求结合起来,并确保决策和关怀服务是以创伤为基础的、以减少伤害为重点的,以及在文化上受到尊重的。关系伦理学可以支持公平和姑息关怀方面的社会变革,为关怀高度边缘化人群提供符合伦理的方式。
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来源期刊
Palliative Care and Social Practice
Palliative Care and Social Practice Nursing-Advanced and Specialized Nursing
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
37
审稿时长
9 weeks
期刊最新文献
Medical influence: what does success look like? Palliative care consultation in the last week of life and associated factors: a cross-sectional general population study. Using relational ethics to approach equity in palliative care. Fostering timely integrated palliative care in nursing homes through critical companionship: experiences from a Padi-Palli interventional study in France. Experience or perception: What healthcare providers need when using the Utrecht Symptom Diary-4 Dimensional, a mixed-methods study.
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