Abstract

BackgroundDespite 50 years of modern palliative care (PC), a misunderstanding of its purpose persists. The original message that PC is focused on total care, helping to live until the person dies, is being replaced and linked to feelings of fear, anxiety and death, instead of compassion, support or appropriate care. Society is still afraid to speak its name, and specialized units are identified as “places of death” as opposed to “places of life” meant to treat suffering. This issue is prohibitive to the implementation and development of PC policies worldwide. It is imperative to identify what message PC professionals are relaying to patients and other health care specialists and how that message may condition understandings of the right to access PC.MethodsA qualitative study, employing focused ethnography and participant observation (PO) of the daily interaction of PC professionals with patients and family members in three different PC services. Two researchers independently conducted a thematic analysis, followed by member checking with participants.ResultsA total of 242 h of participant observation revealed the following messages sent by PC professionals in their daily interaction with patients and families: i) We are focused on your wellbeing; ii) You matter: we want to get to know you; iii) Your family is important to us.ConclusionThe complexity of PC discourses contributes to the difficulty of identifying a clear universal message between PC professionals, patients and families. The PC professionals observed transmit a simple message focused on their actions rather than their identity, which may perpetuate some social/cultural misunderstandings of PC. It seems there is a common culture, based on the same values and attitudes, within the messages that PC professionals transmit to patients and their families. PC teams are characterised by their availability.

Highlights

  • Despite 50 years of modern palliative care (PC), a misunderstanding of its purpose persists

  • PC professionals convey three central messages during their daily clinical interaction with patients and families: i) We are a team focused on your wellbeing; ii) You matter: we want to get to know you; iii) Your family is important to us

  • “We are a team focused on your wellbeing” is a clear message transmitted by health professionals explaining “what they do” rather than “who they are”

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Summary

Introduction

Despite 50 years of modern palliative care (PC), a misunderstanding of its purpose persists. Discussions of PC in the news media are usually provided by politicians in a particular context - “The Minister (from Spanish Socialist Workers’ Party,) mentioned the ‘ethical obligation’ of improving the quality of and access to palliative care” - and are characterised by strong ideological and moral content focusing on the social debate [6]. This discourse has been identified by studies as a barrier to the implementation of PC. It is important that the PC message can be transmitted in a positive way by talking more about what it is and less what it is not

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