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Specialist palliative care services response to ethnic minority groups with COVID-19: equal but inequitable-an observational study

Authors :
Mevhibe Hocaoglu
Lorna K Fraser
Jamilla A Hussain
Katherine E Sleeman
Adejoke O Oluyase
Nancy Preston
Fliss E M Murtagh
Andy Bradshaw
Rachel L. Cripps
Irene J Higginson
Sabrina Bajwah
Lesley Dunleavy
Caitlin Allwin
Jonathan Koffman
Catherine Walshe
Matthew Maddocks
Source :
BMJ supportivepalliative care.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

ObjectivesTo develop insights into response of palliative care services caring for people from ethnic minority groups during COVID-19.MethodsCross-sectional online survey of UK palliative care services response to COVID-19. Quantitative data were summarised descriptively and χ2 tests used to explore relationships between categorical variables. Free text comments were analysed using reflexive thematic analysis.Results277 UK services responded. 168 included hospice teams (76% of all UK hospice teams). Services supporting those from ethnic minority groups were more likely to include hospital (pThree themes demonstrated impact of policy introduced during the pandemic, including: disproportionate adverse impact of restricted visiting, compounded communication challenges and unmet religious and faith needs. One theme demonstrated mistrust of services by ethnic minority groups, and the final theme demonstrated a focus on equal and individualised care.ConclusionsPolicies introduced during the COVID-19 pandemic may have adversely impacted those from ethnic minority groups making these at-risk populations even more vulnerable. The palliative care response may have been equal but inequitable. During the para-COVID-19 period, systemic steps, including equality impact assessments, are urgently needed.

Details

ISSN :
20454368
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
BMJ supportivepalliative care
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5e78ff93b1382d83daff7a2b35cb52a2