2016
DOI: 10.1136/bmjspcare-2015-001008
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International palliative care research in the context of global development: a systematic mapping review

Abstract: International palliative care research is a relatively new, but growing field. However, many gaps in the evidence base remain and palliative care research continues to take place outside broader discourses of international development. The relative absence of interventional research demonstrating the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of palliative care risks limiting the tools with which advocates can engage with international policymakers on this topic.

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Cited by 48 publications
(52 citation statements)
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“…In this review, the majority of priority setting exercises were conducted in countries with an preliminary (i.e., New Zealand) or advanced (i.e., UK, Ireland, U.S.A, Canada and Australia) level of palliative care programmes and integration into mainstream health services [65]. A gap in the knowledge of priorities representing those in lower and middleincome countries (LMIC) exists, echoing previous reviews of international palliative care research [66,67]. Whilst there is evidence in this review of engagement, with researchers from high-income regions collaborating and undertaking research in Africa (Powell et al, 2014), a number of researchers [31,67] suggest this raises multi-faceted challenges including the risk of imposing western norms in differing cultural contexts [68].…”
Section: What Is Already Known and What Does This Review Addmentioning
confidence: 96%
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“…In this review, the majority of priority setting exercises were conducted in countries with an preliminary (i.e., New Zealand) or advanced (i.e., UK, Ireland, U.S.A, Canada and Australia) level of palliative care programmes and integration into mainstream health services [65]. A gap in the knowledge of priorities representing those in lower and middleincome countries (LMIC) exists, echoing previous reviews of international palliative care research [66,67]. Whilst there is evidence in this review of engagement, with researchers from high-income regions collaborating and undertaking research in Africa (Powell et al, 2014), a number of researchers [31,67] suggest this raises multi-faceted challenges including the risk of imposing western norms in differing cultural contexts [68].…”
Section: What Is Already Known and What Does This Review Addmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…A gap in the knowledge of priorities representing those in lower and middleincome countries (LMIC) exists, echoing previous reviews of international palliative care research [66,67]. Whilst there is evidence in this review of engagement, with researchers from high-income regions collaborating and undertaking research in Africa (Powell et al, 2014), a number of researchers [31,67] suggest this raises multi-faceted challenges including the risk of imposing western norms in differing cultural contexts [68]. Therefore, the application of western research priority findings is limited, if not adapted to the specific economic, cultural and specific health care context and constraints of lower-and middle-income countries.…”
Section: What Is Already Known and What Does This Review Addmentioning
confidence: 96%
“…In this review, the majority of priority setting exercises were conducted in countries with an preliminary (i.e., (66,67). Whilst there is evidence in this review of engagement, with researchers from high-income regions collaborating and undertaking research in Africa (Powell et al, 2014), a number of researchers (31,67) suggest this raises multi-faceted challenges including the risk of imposing western norms in differing cultural contexts (68). Therefore, the application of western research priority findings is limited, if not adapted to the specific economic, cultural and specific health care context and constraints of lower-and middle-income countries.…”
Section: What Is Already Known and What Does This Review Addmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…International palliative care and palliative care research has increased over the past 10–15 years .…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%