Equitable Inclusion of Patients with Cancer on the Palliative Care Register : a systematic review in primary care

Henderson, Rebecca and Brearley, Sarah G and French, Maddy and Carr, Natalie and Gadoud, Amy (2025) Equitable Inclusion of Patients with Cancer on the Palliative Care Register : a systematic review in primary care. British Journal of General Practice, 75 (759). e659-e668. ISSN 0960-1643

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Abstract

Background GPs are instrumental to palliative care in the UK and most practices maintain a register of patients with palliative care needs. However, many people with incurable cancer who could benefit from palliative care are not included on this register, making this a potential source of end-of-life inequity. Aim To identify barriers and facilitators to recognising the palliative care needs of patients with cancer in the UK and understand how these factors may have an impact on those vulnerable to end-of-life inequity. Design and setting A mixed-methods systematic review. Method Eight electronic databases (Alternative Medicine, CINAHL, Embase, Medline, PsycINFO, Scopus, SocINDEX, and Web of Science) and two preprint servers (medRXiv and Open Science Framework) were searched in November 2024. Qualitative, quantitative, and mixed-methods studies were included. Narrative synthesis was used to integrate study findings, with resulting barriers and facilitators mapped onto the COM-B model domains of capablity, opportunity, and motivation. The impact on equity was evaluated using the PROGRESS-Plus framework. Results Searches returned 7190 citations, with 24 studies included in the review. Seven themes were identified, with barriers and facilitators mapped onto COM-B domains: conceptualisation of palliative care; navigating challenging conversations; healthcare organisation; patient help-seeking; time and resource constraints; perceptions shaping practice; and cognitive associations. There was insufficient evidence about the barriers and facilitators that may be having an impact on those vulnerable to end-of-life inequities. Conclusion GPs experience many barriers to recognising palliative care needs. There is a need for greater understanding of the extent and nature of inequities in recognising such needs, to ensure strategies to increase recognition do not widen inequities.

Item Type:
Journal Article
Journal or Publication Title:
British Journal of General Practice
Uncontrolled Keywords:
/dk/atira/pure/subjectarea/asjc/2700/2714
Subjects:
?? inequalities < patient groupscancer < clinical (physical)terminal illness and palliative care < clinical (general)family practice ??
ID Code:
230138
Deposited By:
Deposited On:
19 Jun 2025 10:25
Refereed?:
Yes
Published?:
Published
Last Modified:
13 Dec 2025 13:16