Health Sciences School, Division of Nursing & Midwifery, The University of Sheffield, Barber House Annexe, 3a Clarkehouse Road, Sheffield, S10 2LA, UK.
School of Nursing, University of Auckland, Auckland, New Zealand.
BMC Palliat Care. 2020 May 19;19(1):71. doi: 10.1186/s12904-020-00577-2.
Informal caregivers represent the foundation of the palliative care workforce and are the main providers of end of life care. Financial pressures are among the most serious concerns for many carers and the financial burden of end of life caregiving can be substantial.
The aim of this critical debate paper was to review and critique some of the key evidence on the financial costs of informal caregiving and describe how these costs represent an equity issue in palliative care.
The financial costs of informal caregiving at the end of life can be significant and include carer time costs, out of pocket costs and employment related costs. Financial burden is associated with a range of negative outcomes for both patient and carer. Evidence suggests that the financial costs of caring are not distributed equitably. Sources of inequity are reflective of those influencing access to specialist palliative care and include diagnosis (cancer vs non-cancer), socio-economic status, gender, cultural and ethnic identity, and employment status. Effects of intersectionality and the cumulative effect of multiple risk factors are also a consideration.
Various groups of informal end of life carers are systematically disadvantaged financially. Addressing these, and other, determinants of end of life care is central to a public health approach to palliative care that fully recognises the value of carers. Further research exploring these areas of inequity in more depth and gaining a more detailed understanding of what influences financial burden is required to take the next steps towards meeting this aspiration. We will address the conclusions and recommendations we have made in this paper through the work of our recently established European Association of Palliative Care (EAPC) Taskforce on the financial costs of family caregiving.
非专业照护者是姑息治疗团队的基础,也是提供临终关怀的主要人员。对许多照护者来说,经济压力是最严重的问题之一,临终照护的经济负担可能相当大。
本文批判性讨论的目的是回顾和评估一些关于非专业照护者临终关怀经济成本的关键证据,并描述这些成本如何成为姑息治疗中的公平问题。
临终非专业照护的经济成本可能很高,包括照护者的时间成本、自付费用和与就业相关的成本。经济负担与患者和照护者的一系列负面结果相关。有证据表明,照顾的经济成本分配不均。不公平的根源反映了那些影响获得专业姑息治疗的因素,包括诊断(癌症与非癌症)、社会经济地位、性别、文化和种族身份以及就业状况。交叉性的影响和多种危险因素的累积效应也是需要考虑的因素。
临终非专业照护者的各种群体在经济上都处于不利地位。解决这些问题以及临终关怀的其他决定因素,是采取公共卫生方法来充分认识照护者价值的姑息治疗的核心。需要进一步研究这些不公平领域,更深入地了解哪些因素影响经济负担,从而朝着实现这一愿望迈出下一步。我们将通过我们最近成立的欧洲姑息治疗协会(EAPC)家庭照护经济成本工作组的工作来解决我们在本文中提出的结论和建议。