Integrating palliative care into primary health care: Indian perspectives
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Progress in Palliative Care
Abstract
Access to palliative care is essential in primary healthcare as most patients and families prefer end-of-life care at home. However, integrating palliative care into the community is often lacking, disrupting the continuity of care. In a low-middle-income country like India, palliative care is usually provided in tertiary and secondary hospitals. Primary palliative care is sporadically offered in some parts of India, like Kerala, through a neighbourhood network of palliative care (NNPC) programmes. The availability of trained providers, funding, and awareness, limits the capacity to provide primary palliative care. It leads to people accessing care at their end of life in acute hospitals, receiving unnecessary medical interventions, and diminishing their quality of dying. The need for developing palliative care in the community in a low-middle-income country like India is explicated here.
First Page
282
Last Page
286
DOI
10.1080/09699260.2023.2241799
Publication Date
1-1-2023
Recommended Citation
Pai, Radhika R.; Nayak, Malathi G.; Serrao, Anita Jesline; and Salins, Naveen, "Integrating palliative care into primary health care: Indian perspectives" (2023). Open Access archive. 8976.
https://impressions.manipal.edu/open-access-archive/8976