Abstract

ContextPalliative care is an emerging health-care service essential for every health-care system. Information on the current status of palliative care service delivery is needed to understand the gap between need for palliative care and current capacity to deliver. ObjectivesTo estimate the number of providers delivering palliative care worldwide and the patients they served in 2017. MethodsEstimates were obtained from a sample of countries from each World Bank income group using typical case purposive sampling methods. Reliable data from the United States and eight additional countries were used for the high-income group. For low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), to determine an estimate of the number of patients served, 30 countries representative of palliative care service delivery in each region and income group were surveyed. ResultsResults from the mapping levels of palliative care development survey identified a total of approximately 25,000 palliative care service delivery teams globally. The total estimate of patients served in 2017 was approximately seven million. ConclusionSignificant disparities in palliative care access exist both by region and income group. The European and Pan-American regions had most while the Eastern Mediterranean, Southeast Asian, and African regions had least. Much more needs to be done to develop and deliver palliative care in LMICs where 80% of the need for palliative care exists. With about 70% of operating palliative care services in high-income countries and only 30% in LMICs, a major effort to develop palliative care in these settings is urgently needed.

Highlights

  • The Worldwide Hospice Palliative Care Alliance and the World Health Organization jointly published the Global Atlas of Palliative Care at the end of Life in 2014,1 which for the first time presented an estimate of the need for palliative care globally

  • Information on the current status of palliative care service delivery is needed to understand the gap between need for palliative care and current capacity to deliver

  • Spearman correlation analyses assessed the relationship with World Bank Income Level, Human Development Index, and Universal Health Coverage to palliative care development

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Summary

Introduction

The Worldwide Hospice Palliative Care Alliance and the World Health Organization jointly published the Global Atlas of Palliative Care at the end of Life in 2014,1 which for the first time presented an estimate of the need for palliative care globally. This need was estimated at over 40 million patients at and before. The need for palliative care, as measured by prevalence of serious health or illness-related suffering, is expected to increase 87% by the year 2060.3

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