Deakin University
Browse

The WHO objectives for palliative care: To what extent are we achieving them?

journal contribution
posted on 1995-01-01, 00:00 authored by G Johnston, Charles AbrahamCharles Abraham
This paper examines recent research in palliative care in the light of the guiding principles set out by the World Health Organization. It outlines the gaps in the literature and suggests priorities for future research. Areas of unmet need are documented and it is argued that research comparing outcomes across care settings and relating particular care practices to outcome measures would help to set care targets. Further definition of the expected outcomes of psychological and spiritual care, as well as care for carers, is recommended. Available measures are reviewed and suggestions made for the development of additional measures. Finally, some key methodological problems are discussed, including making cross-setting comparisons, identifying appropriate outcome measures, prioritizing patients' own identification of outcomes, using different methodologies as death approaches, and combining different perspectives offered by patients, lay carers and professional carers. The role of qualitative data as an indicator of rating scale validity is discussed in this context.

History

Journal

Palliative Medicine

Volume

9

Pagination

123-137

Location

England

ISSN

0269-2163

eISSN

1477-030X

Language

English

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Issue

2

Publisher

EDWARD ARNOLD PUBL LTD