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Where are the values in evaluating palliative care? Learning from community-based palliative care provision. | LitMetric

Where are the values in evaluating palliative care? Learning from community-based palliative care provision.

Palliat Care Soc Pract

School of Social and Environmental Sustainability, University of Glasgow, Glasgow, UK.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The World Health Organization's 2018 Astana Declaration emphasizes the critical role of primary healthcare in achieving universal health coverage and promoting community palliative care, though evaluating these programs presents challenges.
  • This study focuses on the evaluation of a community-based palliative care approach in Kerala, India, using qualitative methods including interviews and observational analysis.
  • Key findings highlight the importance of values such as heterogeneity, voice, and decentralization in the care process, and suggest that effective evaluations must consider both direct and indirect outcomes from the care provided.

Article Abstract

Background: The World Health Organization Astana Declaration of 2018 sees primary healthcare as key to universal health coverage and gives further support to the goal of building sustainable models of community palliative care. Yet evaluating the benefits of such models continues to pose methodological and conceptual challenges.

Objective: To explore evaluation issues associated with a community-based palliative care approach in Kerala, India.

Design: An illuminative case study using a rapid evaluation methodology.

Methodology: Qualitative interviews, documentary analysis and observations of home care and community organising.

Results: We appraise a community palliative care programme in Kerala, India, using three linked 'canvases' of enquiry: (1) 'complex' multi-factorial community-based interventions and implications for evaluation; (2) 'axiological' orientations that foreground values in any evaluation process and (3) the status of evaluative evidence in postcolonial contexts. Three values underpinning the care process were significant: heterogeneity, voice and decentralisation. We identify 'objects of interest' related to first-, second- and third-order outcomes: (1) individuals and organisations; (2) unintended targets outside the core domain and (3) indirect, distal effects within and outside the domain.

Conclusion: We show how evaluation of palliative care in complex community circumstances can be successfully accomplished when attending to the significance of community care values.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11459518PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/26323524241287223DOI Listing

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