4.6 Article

Social disparities and symptom burden in populations with advanced cancer: specialist palliative care providers' perspectives

Journal

SUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER
Volume 27, Issue 12, Pages 4733-4744

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00520-019-04726-z

Keywords

Palliative care; Symptom assessment; Symptom burden; Health status disparities; Qualitative research; Social determinants of health

Funding

  1. University of Alberta Endowment Fund for the Future Support for the Advancement of Scholarship Small Operating Grant [Pro00037064]
  2. Canadian Association of Nurses in Oncology Research Grant [RES0023504]

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Disparities in access to palliative care services for populations with social disparities have been reported in Western countries. Studies indicate that these populations tend to report higher symptom distress than other population groups. We need to further investigate how social disparities influence symptom burden to improve symptom relief in these populations. Purpose To examine the perspectives of specialist palliative care providers concerning the relationship between social disparities and symptom burden in populations with advanced cancer. Methods Two sequential qualitative studies that followed a combination of interpretive and critical methodologies. The interpretive approach was outlined by van Manen's hermeneutic phenomenology while the critical component was informed by the works of Paulo Freire. Participants involved two specialist palliative care teams from a large acute care hospital and a large cancer center in Western Canada. Participants included 11 palliative care providers including registered nurses, nurse practitioners, physicians, and pharmacists. Results Participants perceived that social conditions that might aggravate symptom burden included low income, low education, lack of social support, language barriers, and rurality. The relationship between income and symptom burden reflected diverse views. Participants identified populations prone to complex symptom burden including homeless individuals, Indigenous people, people with a history of addictions, and people with mental health or psychosocial issues. Conclusion Participants perceived that social disparities may increase symptom complexity in populations with advanced cancer. Participants did not identify ethnicity and gender as influencing symptom burden. Further research is needed to examine the interactions of social disparities, patient individuality, and symptom burden.

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