4.5 Article

Optimizing the Global Nursing Workforce to Ensure Universal Palliative Care Access and Alleviate Serious Health-Related Suffering Worldwide

Journal

JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT
Volume 63, Issue 2, Pages E224-E236

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2021.07.014

Keywords

Palliative care; palliative nursing; nursing; global health; global palliative care; serious health-related suffering; universal health coverage

Funding

  1. NIH/NCI Cancer Center Support Grant [P30 CA008748]
  2. NCI [T32 CA009461]

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Access to palliative care is crucial for achieving the highest standard of health. Nurses play a key role in expanding palliative care access and their contributions should be recognized and supported.
Context. Palliative care access is fundamental to the highest attainable standard of health and a core component of universal health coverage. Forging universal palliative care access is insurmountable without strategically optimizing the nursing workforce and integrating palliative nursing into health systems at all levels. The COVID-19 pandemic has underscored both the critical need for accessible palliative care to alleviate serious health-related suffering and the key role of nurses to achieve this goal. Objectives. 1) Summarize palliative nursing contributions to the expansion of palliative care access; 2) identify emerging nursing roles in alignment with global palliative care recommendations and policy agendas; 3) promote nursing leadership development to enhance universal access to palliative care services. Methods. Empirical and policy literature review; best practice models; recommendations to optimize the palliative nursing workforce. Results. Nurses working across settings provide a considerable untapped resource that can be leveraged to advance palliative care access and palliative care program development. Best practice models demonstrate promising approaches and outcomes related to education and training, policy and advocacy, and academic-practice partnerships. Conclusion. An estimated 28 million nurses account for 59% of the international healthcare workforce and deliver up to 90% of primary health services. It has been well-documented that nurses are often the first or only healthcare provider available in many parts of the world. Strategic investments in international and interdisciplinary collaboration, as well as policy changes and the safe expansion of high-quality nursing care, can optimize the efforts of the global nursing workforce to mitigate serious health-related suffering. Crown Copyright (C) 2021 Published by Elsevier Inc. on behalf of American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine. All rights reserved.

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