Tele-palliative care enables people with a life-limiting illness to consult with palliative care staff without having to leave their homes but requires commitment from all stakeholders, particularly on ethical challenges and patient safety issues. When using telecommunications and virtual technology, ethical challenges and patient safety aspects must be taken into account. The aim was to describe formal and informal caregivers' opportunities in tele-palliative care and the associated ethical and safety challenges using a Whittemore and Knafl integrative review method. Ethical and patient safety perspectives were extracted from studies reporting on tele-palliative care interventions. Content on ethically considerable information on the intervention was coded, categorized, and summarized into a matrix developed in advance from literature on socio-technical arrangements and eHealth applications. Nine studies from experimental and nonexperimental research were included. Four studies reported exclusively on the perspective of formal caregivers, 3 studies addressed the perspective of patients and informal caregivers, and 2 studies covered the perspectives of both. Studies of tele-palliative care interventions implicate effects on patient-caregiver relationships but also show that technology is not seen as a replacement of holistic palliative care. However, the authors do not address other relevant ethical issues (eg, sustainability) or consider aspects of patient safety. There is a need for further research to assess privacy, data security, and patient safety in tele-palliative care from the perspective of caregivers as telehealth becomes increasingly important.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1097/NJH.0000000000000986DOI Listing

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