Barriers, blocks, and barricades: Disparities to access of palliative care in cancer care
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
10-17-2023
Publication Title
Current Problems in Cancer
Abstract
Palliative care (PC) is specialized medical care for people living with a serious illness. PC models have stressed pain and symptom management, communication that is patient- and family-centric and longitudinal support for families living with serious illness that is contiguous across multiple settings. Despite the benefits that PC provides from a patient, family and quality of care standpoint, several barriers and disparities exist. Included in these barriers are the lack of geographic access to PC programs as well as the focus on inpatient, hospital-based PC programs versus outpatient and home-based models. Workforce shortages, challenges with defining and designing PC, and racial, cultural and language barriers have all contributed to disparities within PC. This review article outlines PC disparities including geographic access challenges, cross-cultural barriers and symptom and communication specific disparities. We discuss the impact these inequities have on patients living with cancer.
Volume
47
Issue
5
Recommended Citation
Malhotra, Sonia; Christopher, Michelle; Chowdry, Rajasree Pia; Mossman, Brenna; Cooke, Amanda; Deblieux, Josh; Simmons, Cameron; Fisher, Kiondra; Webb, Jason; and Hoerger, Michael, "Barriers, blocks, and barricades: Disparities to access of palliative care in cancer care" (2023). School of Medicine Faculty Publications. 2022.
https://digitalscholar.lsuhsc.edu/som_facpubs/2022
10.1016/j.currproblcancer.2023.101024