Original Article
A Method for Defining and Estimating the Palliative Care Population

https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2005.12.018Get rights and content
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Abstract

Palliative care research is challenged by a disagreement as to what palliative care is, when it should be offered and what conditions warrant specialized palliative care services. These challenges became evident when we used a population-based data linkage to evaluate the delivery of palliative care services in Western Australia. This paper describes the development of a conceptual framework to provide minimal, mid-range, and maximal estimates of a palliative care population. The estimates include nonmalignant conditions; realistically restrict the number and types of conditions; and propose a time frame over which specialized services can be offered. In defining a palliative care population for the purpose of research, development of an estimation method simultaneously addressed the rhetoric of palliative care with the restrictions inherent in both population-based research and service delivery. When applied to a population, the 10 conditions of the minimal estimate provide an acceptable guide to future research and practice.

Key Words

Palliative care
population
malignant conditions
nonmalignant conditions
health planning

Cited by (0)

Funding for this original study was secured through a National Health and Medical Research Council grant (Project Grant 139065).