2016
DOI: 10.1097/ans.0000000000000146
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Death Is a Social Justice Issue

Abstract: All too often, palliative care services are not responsive to the needs of those who are doubly vulnerable, being that they are both in need of palliative care services and experiencing deficits in the social determinants of health that result in complex, intersecting health and social concerns. In this article, we argue for a reorientation of palliative care to explicitly integrate the premises of health equity. We articulate the philosophical, theoretical, and empirical scaffolding required for equity-inform… Show more

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Cited by 63 publications
(59 citation statements)
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“…Ethnographic methodologies focus on qualitatively exploring the nature of particular socio-cultural phenomena in the environments where they occur [42]. Equity-based approaches aim to critically examine whether the distribution of resources, or outcomes of various social processes, are fair among diverse groups of people [27, 28]. Health inequities refer to those unfair, unjust, or potentially remedial differences in health or access to healthcare that result from structural arrangements [43].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 3 more Smart Citations
“…Ethnographic methodologies focus on qualitatively exploring the nature of particular socio-cultural phenomena in the environments where they occur [42]. Equity-based approaches aim to critically examine whether the distribution of resources, or outcomes of various social processes, are fair among diverse groups of people [27, 28]. Health inequities refer to those unfair, unjust, or potentially remedial differences in health or access to healthcare that result from structural arrangements [43].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Health inequities refer to those unfair, unjust, or potentially remedial differences in health or access to healthcare that result from structural arrangements [43]. Theories of social justice challenge inequities by critically examining complex social and power relations and the ways in which they contribute to the development of structural inequities [2628]. From this theoretical positioning, the lens of intersectionality was also applied, which aims to explore the complex simultaneous and interdependent interactions between types of social difference and identity (e.g., gender, sex, race, socio-economic status, mental health, etc.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…This is the first quantitative multi-jurisdictional investigation of health service quality for Indigenous Australians in palliative care. The dual vulnerability experienced by socially disadvantaged persons with a life-limiting illness [32] underscores the importance of investigating equity of palliative care service provision. Our findings provide reassurance that timeliness of episode-by-episode care provision to Indigenous Australians within the majority of specialist palliative care services nationwide that provide data to PCOC has met the established benchmark overall, while suggesting modest disparities affecting this population.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%