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Systematic review of the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, carers and health and social care professionals.

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Systematic review of the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, carers and health and social care professionals. / Ahmed, N.; Bestall, J.; Ahmedzai, S. et al.
In: Palliative Medicine, Vol. 18, No. 6, 09.2004, p. 525-542.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Ahmed N, Bestall J, Ahmedzai S, Payne S, Clark D, Noble B. Systematic review of the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, carers and health and social care professionals. Palliative Medicine. 2004 Sept;18(6):525-542. doi: 10.1191/0269216304pm921oa

Author

Ahmed, N. ; Bestall, J. ; Ahmedzai, S. et al. / Systematic review of the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, carers and health and social care professionals. In: Palliative Medicine. 2004 ; Vol. 18, No. 6. pp. 525-542.

Bibtex

@article{cf9e96f6e538465fb0d7719e605a4963,
title = "Systematic review of the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, carers and health and social care professionals.",
abstract = "To determine the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, informal carers and health and social care professionals involved in their care in primary and secondary care settings. Data sources: Eleven electronic databases (medical, health-related and social science) were searched from the beginning of 1997 to October 2003. Palliative Medicine (January 1997–October 2003) was also hand-searched. Study selection: Systematic search for studies, reports and policy papers written in English. Data extraction: Included papers were data-extracted and the quality of each included study was assessed using 10 questions on a 40-point scale. Results: The search resulted in 9921 hits. Two hundred and seven papers were directly concerned with symptoms or issues of access, referral or barriers and obstacles to receiving palliative care. Only 40 (19%) papers met the inclusion criteria. Several barriers to access and referral to palliative care were identified including lack of knowledge and education amongst health and social care professionals, and a lack of standardized referral criteria. Some groups of people failed to receive timely referrals e.g., those from minority ethnic communities, older people and patients with nonmalignant conditions as well as people that are socially excluded e.g., homeless people. Conclusions: There is a need to improve education and knowledge about specialist palliative care and hospice care amongst health and social care professionals, patients and carers. Standardized referral criteria need to be developed. Further work is also needed to assess the needs of those not currently accessing palliative care services.",
keywords = "access • barriers • obstacles • referral • specialist palliative care",
author = "N. Ahmed and J. Bestall and S. Ahmedzai and Sheila Payne and D. Clark and B. Noble",
year = "2004",
month = sep,
doi = "10.1191/0269216304pm921oa",
language = "English",
volume = "18",
pages = "525--542",
journal = "Palliative Medicine",
issn = "1477-030X",
publisher = "SAGE Publications Ltd",
number = "6",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Systematic review of the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, carers and health and social care professionals.

AU - Ahmed, N.

AU - Bestall, J.

AU - Ahmedzai, S.

AU - Payne, Sheila

AU - Clark, D.

AU - Noble, B.

PY - 2004/9

Y1 - 2004/9

N2 - To determine the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, informal carers and health and social care professionals involved in their care in primary and secondary care settings. Data sources: Eleven electronic databases (medical, health-related and social science) were searched from the beginning of 1997 to October 2003. Palliative Medicine (January 1997–October 2003) was also hand-searched. Study selection: Systematic search for studies, reports and policy papers written in English. Data extraction: Included papers were data-extracted and the quality of each included study was assessed using 10 questions on a 40-point scale. Results: The search resulted in 9921 hits. Two hundred and seven papers were directly concerned with symptoms or issues of access, referral or barriers and obstacles to receiving palliative care. Only 40 (19%) papers met the inclusion criteria. Several barriers to access and referral to palliative care were identified including lack of knowledge and education amongst health and social care professionals, and a lack of standardized referral criteria. Some groups of people failed to receive timely referrals e.g., those from minority ethnic communities, older people and patients with nonmalignant conditions as well as people that are socially excluded e.g., homeless people. Conclusions: There is a need to improve education and knowledge about specialist palliative care and hospice care amongst health and social care professionals, patients and carers. Standardized referral criteria need to be developed. Further work is also needed to assess the needs of those not currently accessing palliative care services.

AB - To determine the problems and issues of accessing specialist palliative care by patients, informal carers and health and social care professionals involved in their care in primary and secondary care settings. Data sources: Eleven electronic databases (medical, health-related and social science) were searched from the beginning of 1997 to October 2003. Palliative Medicine (January 1997–October 2003) was also hand-searched. Study selection: Systematic search for studies, reports and policy papers written in English. Data extraction: Included papers were data-extracted and the quality of each included study was assessed using 10 questions on a 40-point scale. Results: The search resulted in 9921 hits. Two hundred and seven papers were directly concerned with symptoms or issues of access, referral or barriers and obstacles to receiving palliative care. Only 40 (19%) papers met the inclusion criteria. Several barriers to access and referral to palliative care were identified including lack of knowledge and education amongst health and social care professionals, and a lack of standardized referral criteria. Some groups of people failed to receive timely referrals e.g., those from minority ethnic communities, older people and patients with nonmalignant conditions as well as people that are socially excluded e.g., homeless people. Conclusions: There is a need to improve education and knowledge about specialist palliative care and hospice care amongst health and social care professionals, patients and carers. Standardized referral criteria need to be developed. Further work is also needed to assess the needs of those not currently accessing palliative care services.

KW - access • barriers • obstacles • referral • specialist palliative care

U2 - 10.1191/0269216304pm921oa

DO - 10.1191/0269216304pm921oa

M3 - Journal article

VL - 18

SP - 525

EP - 542

JO - Palliative Medicine

JF - Palliative Medicine

SN - 1477-030X

IS - 6

ER -