International palliative care research priorities: A systematic review

Abstract Background There has been increasing evidence and debate on palliative care research priorities and the international research agenda. To date, however, there is a lack of synthesis of this evidence, examining commonalities, differences, and gaps. To identify and synthesize literature on in...

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Main Authors: Felicity Hasson, Emma Nicholson, Deborah Muldrew, Olufikayo Bamidele, Sheila Payne, Sonja McIlfatrick
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2020-02-01
Series:BMC Palliative Care
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-020-0520-8
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spelling doaj-0a7221d00e814f52a9f98ac90143fabb2021-02-07T12:27:44ZengBMCBMC Palliative Care1472-684X2020-02-0119111610.1186/s12904-020-0520-8International palliative care research priorities: A systematic reviewFelicity Hasson0Emma Nicholson1Deborah Muldrew2Olufikayo Bamidele3Sheila Payne4Sonja McIlfatrick5Institute of Nursing and Health Research, School of Nursing, Ulster UniversityUCD School of Nursing, Midwifery and Health Systems, UCD College of Health and Agricultural Sciences, University College DublinInstitute of Nursing and Health Research, School of Nursing, Ulster UniversityAcademcy of Primary Care, Hull York Medical School, Allam Medical Building, University of HullInternational Observatory on End of Life Care, Lancaster UniversityInstitute of Nursing and Health Research, School of Nursing, Ulster UniversityAbstract Background There has been increasing evidence and debate on palliative care research priorities and the international research agenda. To date, however, there is a lack of synthesis of this evidence, examining commonalities, differences, and gaps. To identify and synthesize literature on international palliative care research priorities originating from Western countries mapped to a quality assessment framework. Methods A systematic review of several academic and grey databases were searched from January 2008–June 2019 for studies eliciting research priorities in palliative care in English. Two researchers independently reviewed, critically appraised, and conducted data extraction and synthesis. Results The search yielded 10,235 articles (academic databases, n = 4108; grey literature, n = 6127), of which ten were included for appraisal and review. Priority areas were identified: service models; continuity of care; training and education; inequality; communication; living well and independently; and recognising family/carer needs and the importance of families. Methodological approaches and process of reporting varied. There was little representation of patient and caregiver driven agendas. The priorities were mapped to the Donabedian framework for assessing quality reflecting structure, process and outcomes and key priority areas. Conclusions Limited evidence exists pertaining to research priorities across palliative care. Whilst a broad range of topics were elicited, approaches and samples varied questioning the credibility of findings. The voice of the care provider dominated, calling for more inclusive means to capture the patient and family voice. The findings of this study may serve as a template to understand the commonalities of research, identify gaps, and extend the palliative care research agenda.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-020-0520-8Palliative careresearch prioritiesConsensusInternational. Systematic review
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Felicity Hasson
Emma Nicholson
Deborah Muldrew
Olufikayo Bamidele
Sheila Payne
Sonja McIlfatrick
spellingShingle Felicity Hasson
Emma Nicholson
Deborah Muldrew
Olufikayo Bamidele
Sheila Payne
Sonja McIlfatrick
International palliative care research priorities: A systematic review
BMC Palliative Care
Palliative care
research priorities
Consensus
International. Systematic review
author_facet Felicity Hasson
Emma Nicholson
Deborah Muldrew
Olufikayo Bamidele
Sheila Payne
Sonja McIlfatrick
author_sort Felicity Hasson
title International palliative care research priorities: A systematic review
title_short International palliative care research priorities: A systematic review
title_full International palliative care research priorities: A systematic review
title_fullStr International palliative care research priorities: A systematic review
title_full_unstemmed International palliative care research priorities: A systematic review
title_sort international palliative care research priorities: a systematic review
publisher BMC
series BMC Palliative Care
issn 1472-684X
publishDate 2020-02-01
description Abstract Background There has been increasing evidence and debate on palliative care research priorities and the international research agenda. To date, however, there is a lack of synthesis of this evidence, examining commonalities, differences, and gaps. To identify and synthesize literature on international palliative care research priorities originating from Western countries mapped to a quality assessment framework. Methods A systematic review of several academic and grey databases were searched from January 2008–June 2019 for studies eliciting research priorities in palliative care in English. Two researchers independently reviewed, critically appraised, and conducted data extraction and synthesis. Results The search yielded 10,235 articles (academic databases, n = 4108; grey literature, n = 6127), of which ten were included for appraisal and review. Priority areas were identified: service models; continuity of care; training and education; inequality; communication; living well and independently; and recognising family/carer needs and the importance of families. Methodological approaches and process of reporting varied. There was little representation of patient and caregiver driven agendas. The priorities were mapped to the Donabedian framework for assessing quality reflecting structure, process and outcomes and key priority areas. Conclusions Limited evidence exists pertaining to research priorities across palliative care. Whilst a broad range of topics were elicited, approaches and samples varied questioning the credibility of findings. The voice of the care provider dominated, calling for more inclusive means to capture the patient and family voice. The findings of this study may serve as a template to understand the commonalities of research, identify gaps, and extend the palliative care research agenda.
topic Palliative care
research priorities
Consensus
International. Systematic review
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-020-0520-8
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