Abstract

Symptom relief is fundamental to palliative care. Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander (Indigenous) Australians are known to experience inequities in health care delivery and outcomes, but large-scale studies of end-of-life symptoms in this population are lacking. We compared symptom-related distress among Indigenous and non-Indigenous Australian patients in specialist palliative care using the multi-jurisdictional Palliative Care Outcomes Collaboration dataset. Based on patient-reported rating scale responses, adjusted relative risks (aRRs) stratified by care setting were calculated for occurrence of (i) symptom-related moderate-to-severe distress and worsening distress during a first episode of care and (ii) symptom-related moderate-to-severe distress at the final pre-death assessment. The p-value significance threshold was corrected for multiple comparisons. First-episode frequencies of symptom-related distress were similar among Indigenous (n = 1180) and non-Indigenous (n = 107,952) patients in both inpatient and community settings. In final pre-death assessments (681 Indigenous and 67,339 non-Indigenous patients), both groups had similar occurrence of moderate-to-severe distress when care was provided in hospital. In community settings, Indigenous compared with non-Indigenous patients had lower pre-death risks of moderate-to-severe distress from overall symptom occurrence (aRR 0.78; p = 0.001; confidence interval [CI] 0.67–0.91). These findings provide reassurance of reasonable equivalence of end-of-life outcomes for Indigenous patients who have been accepted for specialist palliative care.

Highlights

  • People with a life-limiting illness often experience physical symptoms that distress them and their carers as well as treating clinicians [1,2]

  • For the first study objective, the analysis was based on post-commencement symptom assessments, restricted for the purpose of between-patient comparability to first episodes of care by a participating service, which account for the majority (69.7%) of episodes captured in the dataset

  • Patients receiving palliative care have a broad range of underlying diagnoses and diverse end-of-life symptom trajectories [25,26,27,28], as found in the present study, poor control of pain and other distressing physical symptoms as death approaches affects a substantial proportion of patients

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Summary

Introduction

People with a life-limiting illness often experience physical symptoms that distress them and their carers as well as treating clinicians [1,2]. Public Health 2020, 17, 3131; doi:10.3390/ijerph17093131 www.mdpi.com/journal/ijerph

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