Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-g8jcs Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-22T21:18:53.038Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Rethinking palliative care in a public health context: addressing the needs of persons with non-communicable chronic diseases

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 September 2020

Chariklia Tziraki*
Affiliation:
Israel Gerontological Data Center, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel MELABEV – Community Clubs for Elders, Jerusalem, Israel
Corrina Grimes
Affiliation:
Public Health Agency of Northern Ireland, Belfast, UK
Filipa Ventura
Affiliation:
The Health Sciences Research Unit: Nursing, Nursing School of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal
Rónán O’Caoimh
Affiliation:
Department of Medicine, Clinical Sciences Institute, National University of Ireland, Galway, Ireland
Silvina Santana
Affiliation:
Department of Economics, Management, Industrial Engineering and Tourism, Institute of Electronics and Informatics Engineering of Aveiro, University of Aveiro, Aveiro, Portugal
Veronica Zavagli
Affiliation:
Psycho-Oncology Unit, ANT Italia Foundation, Bologna, Italy
Silvia Varani
Affiliation:
ANT Italia Foundation, Bologna, Italy
Donatella Tramontano
Affiliation:
Department of Molecular Medicine and Medical Biotechnology, Federico II University of Naples, Naples, Italy
João Apóstolo
Affiliation:
Department of Nursing, Nursing School of Coimbra, Coimbra, Portugal
Bart Geurden
Affiliation:
Nursing and Midwifery, Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, University of Antwerp, Antwerp, Belgium
Vincenzo De Luca
Affiliation:
Research and Development Unit, Federico II University Hospital, Naples, Italy
Giovanni Tramontano
Affiliation:
Hospital Care Division, General Directorate for Health, Campania Region, Naples, Italy
Maria Rosaria Romano
Affiliation:
Hospital Care Division, General Directorate for Health, Campania Region, Naples, Italy
Marilena Anastasaki
Affiliation:
Clinic of Social and Family Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece
Christos Lionis
Affiliation:
Department of Social Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Crete, Heraklion, Crete, Greece
Rafael Rodríguez-Acuña
Affiliation:
Andalusian Public Foundation Progress and Health (FPS), Seville, Spain
Manuel Luis Capelas
Affiliation:
Interdisciplinary Health Research Center (CIIS), Institute of Health Sciences, Portuguese Catholic University, Lisbon, Portugal
Tânia dos Santos Afonso
Affiliation:
Interdisciplinary Health Research Center (CIIS), Institute of Health Sciences, Portuguese Catholic University, Lisbon, Portugal
David William Molloy
Affiliation:
Centre for Gerontology and Rehabilitation, School of Medicine, University College of Cork, Cork, Ireland
Giuseppe Liotta
Affiliation:
Department of Biomedicine and Prevention, University of Rome Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy
Guido Iaccarino
Affiliation:
Department of Advanced Biomedical Sciences, Federico II University of Naples, Naples, Italy
Maria Triassi
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health, Federico II University of Naples, Naples, Italy
Patrik Eklund
Affiliation:
Department of Computing Science, Umeå University, Umeå, Sweden
Regina Roller-Wirnsberger
Affiliation:
Department of Internal Medicine, Medical University of Graz, Graz, Austria
Maddalena Illario
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health, Federico II University of Naples, Naples, Italy Health Innovation Division, General Directorate for Health, Campania Region, Naples, Italy
*
Author for correspondence: Chariklia Tziraki, Israel Gerontological Data Center, Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Ramban Street 1, 9242202Jerusalem, Israel. E-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Non-communicable chronic diseases (NCCDs) are the main cause of morbidity and mortality globally. Demographic aging has resulted in older populations with more complex healthcare needs. This necessitates a multilevel rethinking of healthcare policies, health education and community support systems with digitalization of technologies playing a central role. The European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Aging (A3) working group focuses on well-being for older adults, with an emphasis on quality of life and healthy aging. A subgroup of A3, including multidisciplinary stakeholders in health care across Europe, focuses on the palliative care (PC) model as a paradigm to be modified to meet the needs of older persons with NCCDs. This development paper delineates the key parameters we identified as critical in creating a public health model of PC directed to the needs of persons with NCCDs. This paradigm shift should affect horizontal components of public health models. Furthermore, our model includes vertical components often neglected, such as nutrition, resilience, well-being and leisure activities. The main enablers identified are information and communication technologies, education and training programs, communities of compassion, twinning activities, promoting research and increasing awareness amongst policymakers. We also identified key ‘bottlenecks’: inequity of access, insufficient research, inadequate development of advance care planning and a lack of co-creation of relevant technologies and shared decision-making. Rethinking PC within a public health context must focus on developing policies, training and technologies to enhance person-centered quality life for those with NCCD, while ensuring that they and those important to them experience death with dignity.

Type
Development
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s) 2020

Introduction

Non-communicable chronic diseases (NCCDs), such as diabetes, cancer, dementia and heart disease, rank second on the World Health Organization (WHO) list of global health priorities (World Health Organization, 2019a). Persons with NCCDs account for ≥70% of all deaths worldwide (Centeno and Arias-Casais, Reference Centeno and Arias-Casais2019; World Health Organization, 2019b). Palliative care (PC) is essential to quality living as well as to quality death for persons with NCCDs, and the concepts and services related to its provision are part of the integrative care approach to health care that includes health promotion even in the presence of established disease (Mittelmark et al., Reference Mittelmark, Bull, Bouwman, Mittelmark, Sagy and Eriksson2017). The WHO definition of PC puts emphasis on enhancing quality of life (QOL) for patients and their families through the prevention/relief of suffering by means of early identification, comprehensive assessment and treatment of pain and other physical, psychosocial and spiritual suffering. Achieving these goals requires an integrative approach. This includes the promotion of appropriate policies, adequate access to treatment and interventions such as drug availability, education of both healthcare workers and the public, and the implementation of generalist PC services at all levels of society (Abel et al., Reference Abel, Kellehear and Karapliagou2018). While not denying the reality of death, PC offers a positive approach for living life to the full, even for those with NCCDs (Tiberini and Richardson, Reference Tiberini and Richardson2015; World Health Organization, 2019b). The number of persons potentially benefitting from integrated PC in chronic care management is estimated to rise from 25 to 47% in 2040 (Centeno et al., Reference Centeno, Sitte, De Lima, Alsirafy, Bruera, Callaway, Foley, Luyirika, Mosoiu, Pettus and Puchalski2018).

The 2016 review of public health approaches to PC by Colleen Dempers and Merryn Gott recognized three main paradigms in PC and public health, disciplines with overlapping boundaries: health promotion approaches, WHO approach and population-based approaches (Dempers and Gott, Reference Dempers and Gott2017).

The aim of this paper is to stimulate a discussion on how to promote a paradigm shift towards the deployment of a public health approach to delivering PC for persons with NCCD that addresses the spectrum from ‘end of life’ to ‘quality of life while living longer’ (Evans et al., Reference Evans, Ison, Ellis-Smith, Nicholson, Costa, Oluyase, Namisango, Bone, Brighton, Yi and Combes2019). We will present a new concept of integration of PC through horizontal and vertical actions, applicable within any health and social care system, with a person-centered PC approach for people with NCCDs, their families and caregivers and supporting not only a quality of death but also that of life with persons with NCCDs.

Our aim is to build on the work presented in the European Association for Palliative Care Atlas (Arias-Casais et al., Reference Arias-Casais, Garralda and Rhee2019) and the current document on PC by the WHO (World Health Organization, 2019b) via collaboration in the A3 action group on ‘Lifespan Health Promotion & Prevention of Age Related Frailty and Disease’ of the European Innovation Partnership on Active and Healthy Ageing (EIP/AHA). We will discuss (primarily within an EU context) the enablers, barriers and gaps in shifting PC toward a person-centered public health approach that emphasizes the early detection of PC needs to maintain QOL (Scheerens et al., Reference Scheerens, Pype, Van Cauwenberg, Vanbutsele, Eecloo, Derom, Van Belle, Joos, Deliens and Chambaere2020) and allows the integration of PC into chronic care management. We anticipate that this discourse will stimulate readers to consider new policy and pathways for integrating chronic care management into macro-, meso- and micro-levels of care systems.

Factors important to build a successful public health model of PC in the context of people with NCCD and their management

In 2016, DeSalvo et al. (Reference DeSalvo, O’Carroll, Koo, Auerbach and Monroe2016) sounded a call to action for public health to ‘boldly expand the scope and reach of public health to address all factors that promote health and well-being, including those related to economic development, education, transportation, food, environment, and housing’. This extended scope of public health is important in the development of a successful public health model for PC.

Horizontal factors

As previous literature has pointed out (Abel et al., Reference Abel, Kellehear and Karapliagou2018), clinical factors alone are not sufficient to address the social aspects of PC. We aim to create a framework for improving PC for persons with NCCDs (Pfaff et al., Reference Pfaff, Dolovich, Howard, Sattler, Zwarenstein and Marshall2020), through person-centered care model. Figure 1 depicts the domains covered in this paper.

Figure 1. Rethinking palliative care for chronic diseases

We review factors that operate on the horizontal level, that is, process-related factors, the primary pathways through which persons with CD usually pass, and discuss factors through a vertical lens that focuses primarily on knowledge and information in their broadest sense (Heeringa et al., Reference Heeringa, Mutti, Furukawa, Lechner, Maurer and Rich2020).

Since the publication of the WHO public health model, a guideline for governments to help implement and integrate PC into healthcare systems, there has been a remarkable expansion in access to PC across European countries (Callaway et al.et al., 2018). Implementation has mainly focused on institutional care, but it is also offered in primary care models in different European member states. PC can take advantage of ‘lessons learnt’ from these models and integrate these concepts on a broader, community level, while maintaining a person-centered approach. The following section highlights factors supporting successful integration of PC into a chronic care model at the macro-level.

Healthcare systems and health policies

In the majority of countries, PC is only provided in the last month of life, rather than in the context of living with NCCD (Arias-Casais et al., Reference Arias-Casais, Garralda and Rhee2019).

The WHO public health model promotes the implementation of PC approach at multiple levels of society. This requires the successful coordination of local, regional and national organizations and communities to identify PC needs and promotion of a palliative rehabilitation approach for persons with NCCDs. This can maximize their physical and mental well-being, promote resilience and maintain QOL (Greenlund et al., Reference Greenlund, Keenan, Clayton, Pandey and Hong2012). In 2000, the National Council for Hospice and Specialist Palliative Care Services outlined the aims of palliative rehabilitation as to ‘maximize patients’ ability to function, to promote their independence and to help them adapt to their condition’.

Extension of PC beyond healthcare systems via a ‘compassionate communities’ approach will shift the focus from end-of-life care towards ‘early’ PC and health promotion despite disease conditions (World Health Organization, 2014; Abel et al., Reference Abel, Kellehear and Karapliagou2018; Whitelaw and Clark, Reference Whitelaw and Clark2019).

In 2018, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe published a resolution calling on Member States to take measures to strengthen PC services, thereby ensuring access and provision to quality PC for both adults and children (Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe, 2018; Carlson et al., Reference Carlson, Chilton, Corso and Beitsch2015).

PC networks are also recognized as important structures to support the integration of care by bringing together key professionals to meet the complex needs of those requiring PC (Bainbridge et al., Reference Bainbridge, Brazil, Krueger, Ploeg and Taniguchi2010). These networks are ideally suited for those with NCCD given their complex care needs. It is also likely that such networks can facilitate an overarching public health approach to PC and improve integration of care in a cost-effective and efficacious way (Bainbridge et al., Reference Bainbridge, Brazil, Krueger, Ploeg and Taniguchi2010).

Advance care planning

Advance care planning (ACP) describes the formalized process of meeting, discussing and documenting individuals’ preferences for their future care needs for a time when they are no longer able to participate meaningfully in decision-making (Crowther and Costello, Reference Crowther and Costello2017). Being able to express one’s future preference for treatment and engage in shared care planning is an integral part of PC.

ACP should involve multiple stakeholders including, but not limited to, the individuals themselves, those important to them and interdisciplinary healthcare and social care professionals. The focus is on the co-production as a means to achieve inclusive, holistic and person-centered ACP.

It is recommended that ACP begin at an early stage of chronic disease. Little research, however, is available on how to achieve this objective. This is reflected by generally low levels of uptake in all parts of the world (Mullick et al., Reference Mullick, Martin and Sallnow2013; Osborn et al., Reference Osborn, Moulds, Squires, Doty and Anderson2014) that may be related to cultural taboos and beliefs (Con, Reference Con2007; Rao et al., Reference Rao, Anderson, Lin and Laux2014). It is important to assess public health aspects of the process that may support and encourage stakeholders to open a dynamic dialogue at the earliest appropriate stage. This has been described as ‘up-streaming and normalizing’ ACP discussions (Prince-Paul and DiFranco, Reference Prince-Paul and DiFranco2017).

Patients and their families

The WHO recommends approaching persons with NCCD and their caregivers as a ‘unit of care’, focusing on the well-being of the patient–caregiver dyad rather than just on the patient. It is important to recognize caregivers’ needs, and supporting family caregivers has pre- and post-bereavement benefits (Aoun et al., Reference Aoun, Rumbold, Howting, Bolleter and Breen2017). A ‘family caregiver’ in this context is anyone providing any type of physical and emotional care for an individual at home. While family caregivers can be considered an extension of the healthcare team, they often do not feel adequately prepared for their role, which may impact on their physical and mental well-being (Robison et al., Reference Robison, Fortinsky, Kleppinger, Shugrue and Porter2009; Rohleder et al., Reference Rohleder, Marin, Ma and Miller2009) and even cause them to become the next cohort of persons with NCCDs. PC research, policy and practice must invest in the needs of these caregivers, because supporting caregivers is a cost-effective long-term care investment: caregivers reduce demand for institutionalization and reliance on public health programs (World Health Organization, 2014). Even when family members do not take on caregiver roles, their needs must be addressed (Mehta et al., Reference Mehta, Cohen and Chan2009), as the illness of one member impacts on all other members.

Social support is a protective factor in grief (Burke and Neimeyer, Reference Burke, Neimeyer, Stroebe, Schut and van den Bout2013), and social relations have ‘a larger impact on reducing mortality than any other existing intervention’ (Holt-Lunstad et al., Reference Holt-Lunstad, Smith and Layton2010). Compassionate communities and community caring networks (Aoun et al., Reference Aoun, Breen, White, Rumbold and Kellehear2018) have been developed in different countries (McLoughlin et al., Reference McLoughlin, Rhatigan, McGilloway, Kellehear, Lucey, Twomey, Conroy, Herrera-Molina, Kumar, Furlong, Callinan, Watson, Currow and Bailey2015), where family members have opportunities to share their grief experiences outside family so as to avoid overloading each other (Hooghe et al., Reference Hooghe, Neimeyer and Rober2011).

PC guidelines propose that bereavement support be offered according to need (World Health Organization, 2017). However, in practice, bereavement is often not recognised as being an integral part of PC, and there tends not to be formal guidelines/standards nor the use assessment tools to support its management and identification (Guldin et al., Reference Guldin, Murphy, Keegan, Monroe, Lacasta-Reverte and Benkel2015). Future guidelines should include targeted support, based on personalized needs, risk assessment measures and clear evidence of efficacy (Breen et al., Reference Breen, Aoun, O’Connor and Rumbold2014).

Vertical factors

Primary food care

Primary food care (PFC) is all the care that is spent on the balanced composition, appropriate preparation and daily providing of regular meals. Optimal PFC is the result of integrated care in which many stakeholders are involved, including the persons themselves and their family caregivers. PFC was first described by EIP/AHA (Illario et al., Reference Illario, Maione, Rusciano, Goossens, Rauter, Braz, Jager-Wittenaar, Di Somma, Crola, Soprano, Vuolo, Campiglia, Iaccarino, Griffiths, Hartman, Tramontano, Colao and Roller-Wirnsberger2016) as an indispensable part of the food-and-nutritional approach to nutritional frailty in elderly (Illario et al., Reference Illario, Maione, Rusciano, Goossens, Rauter, Braz, Jager-Wittenaar, Di Somma, Crola, Soprano, Vuolo, Campiglia, Iaccarino, Griffiths, Hartman, Tramontano, Colao and Roller-Wirnsberger2016). However, all aspects of PFC are also equally as important in PC: QOL, symptom management, patient autonomy and attention to psychosocial, emotional and spiritual aspects, including cultural needs, not only for the persons with PC needs but also those important to them.

As the person’s NCCD progresses, healthy eating guidelines recommended for the general population are no longer appropriate due to the effects of illness and treatment on the body and potential disturbances in appropriate food intake (Klein et al., Reference Klein, Lang, Bükki, Sittl and Ostgathe2011; Pilgrim et al., Reference Pilgrim, Robinson, Sayer and Roberts2015). The aim of PFC in this stage of PC is to minimize food-related discomfort and maximize food enjoyment with respect to the individuals’ caloric needs, and it should be accompanied by early identification of any food-related problem (Hutton et al., Reference Hutton, Baracos and Wismer2007; Boltong et al., Reference Boltong, Aranda, Keast, Wynne, Francis, Chirgwin and Gough2014). The employment of PFC interventions needs to be discussed with the person and her family with respect to cultural and religious sensitivities (Maher and Hemming, Reference Maher and Hemming2005).

In the late stage of PC, the focus of PFC interventions progressively shifts to maximizing food enjoyment, with less emphasis on caloric and nutrient needs. A specific food or a distinct taste might even evoke reminiscence (Nyatanga, Reference Nyatanga2015), memories of happy moments from the past. Food has a much greater significance than merely provision of nutrients, not only for the person with the PC need but also those important to him.

PFC innovations, such as personalizing meals based on preference and symptom management, are not yet common practice in health care and social care (Holder, Reference Holder2003; Amano et al., Reference Amano, Morita, Miyamoto, Uno, Katayama and Tatara2018), and thus an area which has been minimally addressed in scientific literature.

Resilience, well-being and leisure

Between physical health and subjective well-being exists a two-way relation: poor health leads to a reduced subjective well-being, while high well-being can reduce physical health impairments and is associated with longer survival (Veenhoven, Reference Veenhoven2008; Ryff, Reference Ryff2014; Steptoe et al., Reference Steptoe, Deaton and Stone2015; Diener et al., Reference Diener, Oishi and Lucas2015, Reference Diener, Pressman, Hunter and Delgadillo-Chase2017; Martín-María et al., Reference Martín-María, Miret, Caballero, Rico-Uribe, Steptoe, Chatterji and Ayuso-Mateos2017).

Resilience is the capacity of coping with changes and bouncing back from stress or adversity. It is associated with longevity, lower rates of depression and greater satisfaction with life and helps to maintain and promote mental health (Earvolino-Ramirez, Reference Earvolino-Ramirez2007; Fletcher and Sarkar, Reference Fletcher and Sarkar2013; McEwen, Reference McEwen2016).

Social isolation and loneliness are risk factors for NCCDs (Malcolm et al., Reference Malcolm, Frost and Cowie2019), but they can also be their consequence, worsening the disease and limiting the success of therapeutic interventions. Fighting social isolation and loneliness is a key factor in limiting the negative outcomes of NCCDs. Leisure activities may provide for persons with NCCDs a way to better cope with their disease and social isolation (Rapacciuolo et al., Reference Rapacciuolo, Perrone Filardi, Cuomo, Mauriello, Quarto, Kisslinger, Savarese, Illario and Tramontano2016; Denovan and Macaskill, Reference Denovan and Macaskill2017; Goulding, Reference Goulding2018) and motivate them to address other aspects of their activities of daily living (Cuypers et al., Reference Cuypers, Krokstad, Holmen, Knudtsen, Bygren and Holmen2012; Hansen et al., Reference Hansen, Sund, Knudtsen, Krokstad and Holmen2015; Paggi et al., Reference Paggi, Jopp and Hertzog2016). Leisure activities should have a key role in PC strategies for NCCDs through a palliative rehabilitation model (Coelho et al., Reference Coelho, Parola, Cardoso, Bravo and Apóstolo2017; Zeilig et al., Reference Zeilig, West and van der Byl Williams2018).

Enablers to enable a public health approach

Digital technologies to enable a public health approach

Innovative digital solutions for public health approach to PC facilitate sharing of information relevant to the health of the person, improve the collective impact of the support provided and relieve caregiver strain (Mayahara et al., Reference Mayahara, Wilbur, O’Mahony and Breitenstein2017; Sirintrapun and Lopez, Reference Sirintrapun and Lopez2018). However, there is little evidence as yet of the impact of technology on the QOL in NCCD (Arris et al., Reference Arris, Fitzsimmons and Mawson2015), and evaluation or implementation studies are still very scarce (Curtis et al., Reference Curtis, Sathitratanacheewin, Starks, Lee, Kross, Downey, Sibley, Lober, Loggers, Fausto and Lindvall2018; Phongtankuel et al., Reference Phongtankuel, Shalev, Adelman, Dewald, Dignam, Baughn, Prigerson, Teresi, Czaja and Reid2018).

The development, deployment and evaluation of information and communication technology (ICT) and information systems in PC call for a patient- and family-centered multi-stakeholder approach – including the patient and people important for him/her, formal and informal caregivers, policy makers and payers with their needs, expectations and limitations – which is often absent from planning and daily practice.

Technologies have been clustered according to their contribution to four pressing needs and aspirations of persons with NCCD at the end of life and the people important for them: feeling in control of their lives, telling their story, staying connected and communicating with caregivers (Portz et al., Reference Portz, Cognetta and Bekelman2018).

Although potentially advantageous and feasible, video consultations lack evidence on general PC, non-cancer cases and countries in a low-socioeconomic status (Jess et al., Reference Jess, Timm and Dieperink2019).

A variety of new media, including voice-assisted technology, digital diaries and virtual reality, can enable older adults to record and share their personal narratives, knowing their life story survives them.

Artificial agents, such as robots, embodied conversational agents and chatbots, have been shown to reduce NCCD loneliness by providing social support (Loveys et al., Reference Loveys, Fricchione, Kolappa, Sagar and Broadbent2019). A number of digital solutions are available to help coordinate and connect a network of caregivers and services.

Technology can also facilitate the widespread dissemination of core knowledge and skills that many generalist clinicians/professionals critically need, including communication skills, via e-learning initiatives (Bates, Reference Bates2016).

There exist a number of examples of how digital solutions have been deployed. Digital storytelling with VoiceThread technology has been used to promote deeper understanding in nursing students about PC concepts (Price et al., Reference Price, Strodtman, Brough, Lonn and Luo2015).

QDACT, a technology-based quality monitoring system for PC, combines patient-reported data with critical PC steps (ACP, inclusion of caregivers) in order to document care quality, link measures of QOL to outcomes in PC and help health professionals to uncover and address unmet needs (Bates, Reference Bates2016).

Health technology allows a centralized Hub where easy-to-read educational materials and treatment guidelines for persons in hospice-based care and their caregivers are readily accessible by a smartphone or a tablet (Phongtankuel et al., Reference Phongtankuel, Shalev, Adelman, Dewald, Dignam, Baughn, Prigerson, Teresi, Czaja and Reid2018).

Globally, there are a number of website resources for healthcare providers and the public. E Hospice (https://ehospice.com/), based in the UK, is a news and information resource that brings global news, commentary and analysis concerning hospice, palliative and end-of-life care, offering a single point of access to good practice from around the world. The All Ireland Institute of Hospice and Palliative Care (https://aiihpc.org/our_work/the-palliative-hub/) and The Canadian Virtual Hospice (http://www.virtualhospice.ca/) join several actors of PC context in a common space for information use (Phongtankuel et al., Reference Phongtankuel, Shalev, Adelman, Dewald, Dignam, Baughn, Prigerson, Teresi, Czaja and Reid2018).

Integrating technological advances into a specialty such as PC is not without its challenges: interaction with impersonal technology; designing adequate, intuitive and user-friendly technology and storing and protection of confidential information (Phongtankuel et al., Reference Phongtankuel, Shalev, Adelman, Dewald, Dignam, Baughn, Prigerson, Teresi, Czaja and Reid2018; Jess et al., Reference Jess, Timm and Dieperink2019). Reimbursement is also a challenge, as under many funding schemes only face-to-face encounters are counted, not screen time.

Transforming PC through leadership, awareness, education and training programs

Professional staff

Professional, individual and community education and training are important action areas for integrating and promoting the core components of global PC initiatives and programs. Project ECHO (https://echo.unm.edu/) is such a leading action comprising a lifelong learning and guided practice model focused on improving medical education and increasing workforce capacity and self-efficacy to provide best-practice care and reduce health disparities, through multidisciplinary knowledge-sharing, networking and technology utilization (Ballesteros et al., Reference Ballesteros, Centeno and Arantzamendi2014; Carrasco et al., Reference Carrasco, Lynch, Garralda, Woitha, Elsner, Filbet, Ellershaw, Clark and Centeno2015).

Availability of adequate tools and training can have a substantial impact on professional sensitization towards PC. In a randomized controlled trial, trained general practitioners demonstrated significant increases in the rates of identification and provision of multidimensional care compared to controls (Thoonsen et al., Reference Thoonsen, Gerritzen, Vissers, Verhagen, van Weel, Groot and Engels2019). Additionally, early training on PC seems to have positive effects on future professionals’ competences (Parikh et al., Reference Parikh, White, Buckingham and Tchorz2017; El-Sourady et al., Reference El-Sourady, Chen, Martin, Ritchie, Ellis, Richeson, Moore, Karlekar and Misra2019). These examples highlight the core role of all-level education and training in PC transformation (Rotar Pavlič et al., Reference Rotar Pavlič, Aarendonk, Wens, Rodrigues Simões, Lynch and Murray2019).

Specially needed are synergies among curricula to develop a public health model of PC in low resource setting with a growing burden of NCCDs (Lionis et al., Reference Lionis, Shea and Markaki2011).

Creating communities of compassion: public

This section includes two key concepts that are still challenging, health and social care services and policies. The first concerns the term ‘compassion’, a universally accepted definition still under debate. The second refers to communities playing a core role in the success of primary care (World Health Organization, 2018).

The emerging concept of compassionate care is broad and extends to palliative and end-of-life care. Based on Kellehear’s definition (Kellehear, Reference Kellehear1999), compassionate care recognizes that ‘all-natural cycles of sickness and health, birth and death, and love and loss occur every day within the orbits of its institutions and regular activities’. Despite the availability of several other formulations of this definition, all agree that ‘it is everyone’s responsibility to care for each other during times of crisis and loss, and not simply the task of health professionals’ (Tompkins, Reference Tompkins2018).

The importance of creating communities attracts a worldwide interest, also in the context of the contribution of public health to PC. An implementation guide for community approaches to end-of-life care has been developed (Compassionate Communities, 2018), according to which ‘compassionate communities could care for people in all phases of end of live, respect and response to the needs and wishes of the dying person and their families, promote leadership embedded within the local community, work alongside service providers to support people at end of life and their families and careers’. It also illustrates how compassionate communities could create community partnerships, raise awareness, activate community groups and provide advocacy and policy.

In settings where primary care is still in development and the notion of compassionate care has not been incorporated, there is a need for preparatory work. A key step would be to explore the role of Health Sciences schools and institutions in mobilizing people and communities to understand palliative and end-of-life needs. Introducing courses on clinician–patient relationship and compassionate care with the involvement of patients’ organizations has already been proven efficient (Lionis et al., Reference Lionis, Shea and Markaki2011). Investing in training of future health and social care professionals (Frilund et al., Reference Frilund, Fagerström, Eriksson and Eklund2013) within the community setting and promoting of collaboration with community groups and stakeholders are also important steps.

Reference regions and twinning

Ensuring adequate support and services to meet the growing demands of an aging population requires a paradigm shift away from reactive to proactive disease management (Porter and Teisberg, Reference Porter and Teisberg2006; Busse and Blümel, Reference Busse and Blümel2010; Ellis et al., Reference Ellis, Whitehead, Robinson, O’Neill and Langhorne2011). Implementing strong integration between levels of care and between communities, social sector and health sector is pivotal to provide appropriate services that take advantage of interdisciplinary competences and skills.

Increasing evidence is now available for the effectiveness of digital solutions in supporting integrated care, improving health outcomes and changing management of social and health systems, while increasing accessibility and sustainability (Lionis et al., Reference Lionis, Papadakaki, Saridaki, Dowrick, O’Donnell, Mair, van den Muijsenbergh, Burns, de Brún, O’Reilly de Brún, van Weel-Baumgarten, Spiegel and MacFarlane2016; Menon et al., Reference Menon, Gray, Fatehi, Bird, Darssan, Karunanithi and Russell2019; Mitchell and Kan, Reference Mitchell and Kan2019; Tai-Seale et al., Reference Tai-Seale, Downing, Jones, Milani, Zhao, Clay, Sharp, Chan and Longhurst2019; Turkki et al., Reference Turkki, Byckhov, Lundin, Isola, Nordling, Kovanen, Verrill, von Smitten, Joensuu, Lundin and Linder2019). Most importantly, to create this integration, consumers and those with NCCD need to be involved in the technological developments and policy generation. This will empower people to take charge of their health and well-being according to their holistic needs.

Nonetheless, such examples are still fragmented throughout the EU. To speed up large-scale adoption, inter-regional collaborations, such as the ScaleAHA study (http://www.scale-aha.eu/home.html) supported by the European Commission are pivotal, as they allow peer-to-peer adaptations to local socio-cultural, organizational and economic contexts.

Within the ScaleAHA initiative, the ‘2016 Transfer of Innovation Scheme’ was carried out, supporting 20 pairs of regions (26 RSs from 13 European countries) to learn from one another and scale up digitally enabled innovative ICT solutions in active and healthy aging. Inter-regional collaborative activities have also been fostering the use of European Structural and Investment Funds to secure the necessary funding to scale up.

The importance of leadership

Another, often overlooked but equally important, enabler of developing a sustainable public health approach to PC is strong leadership and management (Fraser et al., Reference Fraser, Castrucci and Harper2017). Collective leadership working across sectors and with all key stakeholders is required, with a move away from the traditional siloed approach to providing care management (Fraser et al., Reference Fraser, Castrucci and Harper2017). Good governance in this setting should include oversight of networks, engagement with stakeholders, management of resources and the instigation of continuous improvement initiatives (Carlson et al., Reference Carlson, Chilton, Corso and Beitsch2015).

A new model for a public health approach to PC for NCCDs

So, what could this new vision of a strong and integrated public health approach to PC for those living with NCCDs look like? We have outlined some of the important drivers and enablers for the shift away from a health and social care-based system to a more integrated healthcare pathway adopting an overarching public health that includes all key stakeholders (primary care health professionals, community-based organizations and networks of persons with NCCDs, family, formal and informal caregivers, etc.).

The primary care team is key to the concept of creating an integrative public health model. Figure 1 shows the concept based on recent evidence from the literature, good practice models from the EIP/AHA as well as consensus among experts involved in the work presented in this publication.

Based upon the integrated care concept of Kaiser Permanente (Arias-Casais et al., Reference Arias-Casais, Garralda and Rhee2019), the majority of action is located in primary care. Palliative home care can be considered an integrated system of social and health services provided as a continuum, allowing persons with NCCDs to stay in their own life environment as long as possible. When home care services are activated upon hospital discharge with concomitant monitoring (protected discharge), they allow to contain the number and the duration of hospital stays, at the same time ensuring the best assistance possible. ‘Beyond Silos’ is an EU project that addresses the issue of de-hospitalization (Pascale et al., Reference Pascale, Finelli, Giannotti, Visco, Matula, Vairo, Ciccarelli, Coscioni and Iaccarino2016; Visco et al., Reference Visco, Finelli, Pascale, Giannotti, Fabbricatore, Ragosa, Ciccarelli and Iaccarino2017, Reference Visco, Finelli, Pascale, Mazzeo, Ragosa, Trimarco, Illario, Ciccarelli and Iaccarino2018).

Integrated care services, closely oriented to the needs of patients/users, interdisciplinary and anchored in community and home care settings can benefit informal caregivers (Tziraki-Segal et al., Reference Tziraki-Segal, De Luca, Santana, Tramontano, Romano, Scattola, Celata, Gelmi, López-Samaniego, Zavagli, Halkoaho, Grimes, Fernandes, Caetano Tomás, Calza, Coppola, Speranza, Jager-Wittenaar, O’Caoimh, Pietilä, Carriazo, Apostolo, Iaccarino, Liotta, Tramontano, Molloy, Triassi, Viggiani and Illario2019, Pfaff et al., Reference Pfaff, Dolovich, Howard, Sattler, Zwarenstein and Marshall2020). In such environments, ICT generally facilitates transfer of information, eliminating redundant paperwork and monitoring.

During implementation of integrated PC in communities, it is recommended to evaluate sustainability of the efforts undertaken and those achieved through the discussion and adaptation of process indicators, especially in the first cycle of implementation. One of the major challenges lying ahead of us is to assess how evidence-based medicine can be applied in public health for the digital transformation of health and care (Grilli et al., Reference Grilli, Magrini, Penna, Mura and Liberati2000; Burgers et al., Reference Burgers, Grol, Klazinga, Mäkelä and Zaat2003; Brownson et al., Reference Brownson, Fielding and Maylahn2009). To this purpose, we should orient our efforts towards the integration of the best available evidence with the knowledge and inputs from stakeholders and experts to identify how to best address people’s health needs within NCCDs. Data from observational studies, surveillance and modeling will provide the evidence base to further progress the implementation of innovative approaches into public health. A variety of methods for reporting, assessing and grading evidence are available (Weightman et al., Reference Weightman, Ellis, Cullum, Sander and Turley2005; Boyd and Bero, Reference Boyd and Bero2006; Moynihan et al., Reference Moynihan, Oxman, Lavis and Paulsen2008).

The collection of data is pivotal to allow their critical evaluation to support sound decision-making, and this not only concerning the effectiveness of an intervention but also other domains such as privacy, safety, cost, economic evaluation, ethical issues, as well as organizational, social and legal aspects. These domains are not traditionally included in most medical research, but in the case of NCCDs they are crucial for making the shift to public health model of PC, to reflect the holistic, whole system approach and to inform optimal models which could be developed within the framework of sustainable economic policies (Bainbridge et al., Reference Bainbridge, Brazil, Krueger, Ploeg and Taniguchi2010).

To ensure quality of care and effectiveness of service, there needs to be the development of global health policies; the creation of teams with the skills to collate and utilize health data and develop population needs assessment; the provision of the appropriate and timely intervention including access to medication; and educational efforts aimed at patients, healthcare and social professionals and policy makers, especially at the regional level where the cultural and spiritual dimensions can be more readily addressed (Capelas et al., Reference Capelas, Coelho, da Silva and Ferreira2017a, Reference Capelas, Torres, Ferreira, Coelho and da Silva2017b; Gómez-Batiste et al., Reference Gómez-Batiste, Connor, Foley, Callaway, Kumar, Luyirika, Gómez-Batiste and Connor2017a, Reference Gómez-Batiste, Connor, Luyirika, Kumar, Krakauer, Ela, Foley, Gómez-Batiste and Connor2017b).

Conclusions

Integration of PC for the management of people with NCCDs at a public health level requires engagement with all stakeholders from policy to practice, including those with NCCDs and those caring for them.

Whilst there will be a requirement to have a population approach at policy level, the identification of individual needs, expectations and wishes in order to address them coherently, with available assets and resources, is key throughout all levels of care in healthcare systems.

Building on the concept of ACP, provision of tailored primary food supply and strengthening of formal and informal caregivers, authors first present a new concept of integrated PC to be applied for those presenting with NCCDs.

The engagement with not-for-profit organizations and charities is pivotal for sharing a vision and starting the discussion on the development of a regional compassionate care plan. Collaborative approaches to scale up the adoption of innovations in health and care service provision, such as compassionate communities which are developing at local/regional, national and international levels, are key to ensure that change management is ignited at policy makers level and transferred downstream for implementation.

Peer-to-peer interactions and positive engagement with all stakeholders, with a common effort of implementing transformation in the delivery and provision for care, support and services along the entire chain of collaborations, are required, as opposed to exclusion or competitiveness, which can delay and stifle progress and compromise the quality of care provided to those with NCCDs and their caregivers. This also facilitates experts to overcome boundaries between authorities and through an interdisciplinary approach narrow gaps in quality care that often underpin silos between organizations and sectors.

We recommend a global model of public health approach to PC which also incorporates the long-term caregiving role and manages the factors that influence the informal caregivers’ ability to cope with their role by designing and implementing early supportive interventions, such as education and community support (Janse et al., Reference Janse, Huijsman, de Kuyper and Fabbricotti2014).

We conclude that the aim of rethinking PC in a public health context will help improve and promote QOL for people and those important to them, while living with NCCD. Thus, the focus should shift from preparing for a good death to living well until you die.

Authors’ contribution

All authors contributed equally to the development of the manuscript.

Financial support

This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.

Conflicts of interest

None.

Footnotes

*

The author affiliation for Tânia dos Santos Afonso has been updated

References

Abel, J, Kellehear, A and Karapliagou, A (2018) Palliative care – the new essentials. Annals of Palliative Medicine 7 (Suppl 2), S3S14. doi: 10.21037/apm.2018.03.04.Google Scholar
Amano, K, Morita, T, Miyamoto, J, Uno, T, Katayama, H and Tatara, R (2018) Perception of need for nutritional support in advanced cancer patients with cachexia: a survey in palliative care settings. Supportive Care in Cancer 26, 27932799.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Aoun, S, Rumbold, B, Howting, D, Bolleter, A and Breen, L (2017) Bereavement support for family caregivers: the gap between guidelines and practice in palliative care. PLoS One 12, e0184750. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0184750.Google Scholar
Aoun, SM, Breen, LJ, White, I, Rumbold, B and Kellehear, A (2018) What sources of bereavement support are perceived helpful by bereaved people and why? Empirical evidence for the compassionate communities approach. Palliative Medicine 32, 13781388.Google Scholar
Arias-Casais, N, Garralda, E and Rhee, JY (2019) EAPC atlas of palliative care in Europe. Vilvoorde: EAPC Press.Google Scholar
Arris, SM, Fitzsimmons, DA and Mawson, S (2015) Moving towards an enhanced community palliative support service (EnComPaSS): protocol for a mixed method study. BMC Palliative Care 14, 17. doi: 10.1186/s12904-015-0012-4.Google Scholar
Bainbridge, D, Brazil, K, Krueger, P, Ploeg, J and Taniguchi, A (2010) A proposed systems approach to the evaluation of integrated palliative care. BMC Palliative Care 9, 8. doi: 10.1186/1472-684X-9-8.Google ScholarPubMed
Ballesteros, M, Centeno, C and Arantzamendi, M (2014) A qualitative exploratory study of nursing students’ assessment of the contribution of palliative care learning. Nurse Education Today 34, e1e6. doi: 10.1016/j.nedt.2013.12.010.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bates, M (2016) Technological Innovation Comes to Palliative Care: with a shortage of palliative specialists, telemedicine and remote monitoring offer relief. Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers 7, 2529.Google ScholarPubMed
Boltong, A, Aranda, S, Keast, R, Wynne, R, Francis, PA, Chirgwin, J and Gough, K (2014) A prospective cohort study of the effects of adjuvant breast cancer chemotherapy on taste function, food liking, appetite and associated nutritional outcomes. PLoS One 9, e103512. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0103512.Google Scholar
Boyd, EA and Bero, LA (2006) Improving the use of research evidence in guideline development: 4. Managing conflicts of interests. Health Research Policy and Systems 4, 16.Google Scholar
Breen, LJ, Aoun, SM, O’Connor, M and Rumbold, B (2014) Bridging the gaps in palliative care bereavement support: an international perspective. Death Studies 38, 5461.Google Scholar
Brownson, RC, Fielding, JE and Maylahn, CM (2009) Evidence-based public health: a fundamental concept for public health practice. Annual Review of Public Health 30, 175201.Google Scholar
Burgers, JS, Grol, R, Klazinga, NS, Mäkelä, M and Zaat, J (2003) Towards evidence-based clinical practice: an international survey of 18 clinical guideline programs. International Journal for Quality in Health Care: Journal of the International Society for Quality in Health Care/ISQua 15, 3145.Google Scholar
Burke, LA and Neimeyer, RA (2013) Prospective risk factors for complicated grief: a review of the empirical literature. In Stroebe, M, Schut, H and van den Bout, J, editors, Complicated grief: scientific foundations for health care professionals. New York, NY: Routledge/Taylor & Francis Group, 145161.Google Scholar
Busse, R and Blümel, M (2010) Tackling chronic disease in Europe: strategies, interventions and challenges. Copenhagen: WHO Regional Office Europe.Google Scholar
Callaway, M, Connor, S and Foley, K (2018) World Health Organization public health model: a roadmap for palliative care development. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 55 (2S), S6S13.Google Scholar
Capelas, MLV, Coelho, SPF, da Silva, SCFS and Ferreira, CMD (2017a) Cuidar a pessoa que sofre: uma teoria de cuidados paliativos. Lisboa: Universidade Católica Editora.Google Scholar
Capelas, MLV, Torres, SHB, Ferreira, CMD, Coelho, SPF and da Silva, SCFS (2017b) O direito à dignidade: serviços de cuidados paliativos. Lisboa: Universidade Católica Editora.Google Scholar
Carlson, V, Chilton, MJ, Corso, LC and Beitsch, LM (2015) Defining the functions of public health governance. American Journal of Public Health 105 (Suppl 2), S159S166.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carrasco, JM, Lynch, TJ, Garralda, E, Woitha, K, Elsner, F, Filbet, M, Ellershaw, JE, Clark, D and Centeno, C (2015) Palliative care medical education in European universities: a descriptive study and numerical scoring system proposal for assessing educational development. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 50, 516523. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2015.04.019.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Centeno, C and Arias-Casais, N (2019) Global palliative care: from need to action. The Lancet Global Health 7, e815e816. doi: 10.1016/S2214-109X(19)30223-2.Google Scholar
Centeno, C, Sitte, T, De Lima, L, Alsirafy, S, Bruera, E, Callaway, M, Foley, K, Luyirika, E, Mosoiu, D, Pettus, K and Puchalski, C (2018) White paper for global palliative care advocacy: recommendations from a PAL-LIFE expert advisory group of the pontifical academy for life, Vatican City. Journal of Palliative Medicine 21, 13891397.Google ScholarPubMed
Coelho, A, Parola, V, Cardoso, D, Bravo, ME and Apóstolo, J (2017) Use of non-pharmacological interventions for comforting patients in palliative care: a scoping review. JBI Database of Systematic Reviews and Implementation Reports 15, 18671904.Google Scholar
(2018) Compassionate communities: an implementation guide for community approaches to end of life care. Retrieved from http://palliativecare.org.au/wp-content/uploads/dlm_uploads/2018/09/An-implementation-guide-for-community.pdf.Google Scholar
Con, A (2007) Cross-cultural considerations in promoting advance care planning in Canada. Vancouver: Health Canada.Google Scholar
Crowther, J and Costello, J (2017) Palliative care for people with advanced major neuro-cognitive disorders. International Journal of Palliative Nursing 23, 502510.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Curtis, JR, Sathitratanacheewin, S, Starks, H, Lee, RY, Kross, EK, Downey, L, Sibley, J, Lober, W, Loggers, ET, Fausto, JA and Lindvall, C (2018) Using electronic health records for quality measurement and accountability in care of the seriously ill: opportunities and challenges. Journal of Palliative Medicine 21(S2), S52S60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cuypers, K, Krokstad, S, Holmen, TL, Knudtsen, MS, Bygren, LO and Holmen, J (2012) Patterns of receptive and creative cultural activities and their association with perceived health, anxiety, depression and satisfaction with life among adults: the HUNT study, Norway. Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health 66, 698703.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dempers, C and Gott, M (2017) Which public health approach to palliative care? An integrative literature review. Progress in Palliative Care 25, 110. doi: 10.1080/09699260.2016.1189483 Google Scholar
Denovan, A and Macaskill, A (2017) Building resilience to stress through leisure activities: a qualitative analysis. Annals of Leisure Research 20, 446466.Google Scholar
DeSalvo, KB, O’Carroll, PW, Koo, D, Auerbach, JM and Monroe, JA (2016) Public Health 3.0: time for an upgrade. American Journal of Public Health 106, 621622.Google Scholar
Diener, E, Oishi, S and Lucas, RE (2015) National accounts of subjective well-being. The American Psychologist 70, 234.Google Scholar
Diener, E, Pressman, SD, Hunter, J and Delgadillo-Chase, D (2017) If, why, and when subjective well-being influences health, and future needed research. Applied Psychology: Health and Well-Being 9, 133167.Google Scholar
Earvolino-Ramirez, M (2007) Resilience: a concept analysis. Nursing Forum 42, 7382.Google ScholarPubMed
Ellis, G, Whitehead, MA, Robinson, D, O’Neill, D and Langhorne, P (2011) Comprehensive geriatric assessment for older adults admitted to hospital: meta-analysis of randomised controlled trials. The BMJ 343, d6553. doi: 10.1136/bmj.d6553.Google Scholar
El-Sourady, M, Chen, H, Martin, SF, Ritchie, J, Ellis, K, Richeson, A, Moore, D, Karlekar, M and Misra, S (2019) Effects of a primary palliative care educational system for teaching learners at different levels of training. American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine 36, 675681.Google Scholar
Evans, CJ, Ison, L, Ellis-Smith, CL, Nicholson, C, Costa, A, Oluyase, AO, Namisango, E, Bone, AE, Brighton, LJ, Yi, D and Combes, S (2019) Service delivery models to maximize quality of life for older people at the end of life: a rapid review. The Milbank Quarterly 97, 113175.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fletcher, D and Sarkar, M (2013) Psychological resilience: a review and critique of definitions, concepts, and theory. European Psychologist 18, 1223.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Fraser, M, Castrucci, B and Harper, E (2017) Public health leadership and management in the era of public health 3.0. Journal of Public Health Management and Practice 23, 9092.Google Scholar
Frilund, M, Fagerström, L, Eriksson, K and Eklund, P (2013) Assessment of ethical ideals and ethical manners in care of older people. Nursing Research and Practice 2013, 374132. doi: 10.1155/2013/374132.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gómez-Batiste, X, Connor, S, Foley, K, Callaway, M, Kumar, S and Luyirika, E (2017a) The foundations of palliative care public health programs. In Gómez-Batiste, X and Connor, S, editors, Building integrated palliative care programs and services. Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain: Càtedra de Cures Pal·liatives, 6377.Google Scholar
Gómez-Batiste, X, Connor, S, Luyirika, E, Kumar, S, Krakauer, E, Ela, S, Foley, K on Behalf of the TAG (2017b) The technical advisory group (TAG) supporting the WHO palliative care initiative. In Gómez-Batiste, X and Connor, S, editors, Building integrated palliative care programs and services, Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain: Càtedra de Cures Pal·liatives, 2142.Google Scholar
Goulding, A (2018) The role of cultural engagement in older people’s lives. Cultural Sociology 12, 518539.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Greenlund, K, Keenan, N, Clayton, P, Pandey, D and Hong, Y (2012) Public health options for improving cardiovascular health among older Americans. American Journal of Public Health 102, 14981507.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grilli, R, Magrini, N, Penna, A, Mura, G and Liberati, A (2000) Practice guidelines developed by specialty societies: the need for a critical appraisal. The Lancet 355, 103106.Google Scholar
Guldin, M, Murphy, I, Keegan, O, Monroe, B, Lacasta-Reverte, M and Benkel, I (2015) Bereavement services in palliative care in Europe: a survey study by the European Association for Palliative Care bereavement taskforce. European Journal of Palliative Care 22, 185189.Google Scholar
Hansen, E, Sund, E, Knudtsen, MS, Krokstad, S and Holmen, TL (2015) Cultural activity participation and associations with self-perceived health, life-satisfaction and mental health: the Young HUNT Study, Norway. BMC Public Health 15, 544. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-1873-4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heeringa, J, Mutti, A, Furukawa, MF, Lechner, A, Maurer, KA and Rich, E (2020) Horizontal and vertical integration of health care providers: a framework for understanding various provider organizational structures. International Journal of Integrated Care 20, 2. doi: 10.5334/ijic.4635.Google Scholar
Holder, H (2003) Nursing management of nutrition in cancer and palliative care. British Journal of Nursing 12, 667674.Google Scholar
Holt-Lunstad, J, Smith, T and Layton, J (2010) Social relationships and mortality risk: a meta-analytic review. PLoS Medicine 7, e1000316. doi: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1000316.Google Scholar
Hooghe, A, Neimeyer, RA and Rober, P (2011) The complexity of couple communication in bereavement: an illustrative case study. Death Studies 35, 905924.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hutton, JL, Baracos, VE and Wismer, WV (2007) Chemosensory dysfunction is a primary factor in the evolution of declining nutritional status and quality of life in patients with advanced cancer. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 33, 156165.Google Scholar
Illario, M, Maione, AS, Rusciano, MR, Goossens, E, Rauter, A, Braz, N, Jager-Wittenaar, H, Di Somma, C, Crola, C, Soprano, M, Vuolo, L, Campiglia, P, Iaccarino, G, Griffiths, H, Hartman, T, Tramontano, D, Colao, A and Roller-Wirnsberger, R (2016) NutriLive: an integrated nutritional approach as a sustainable tool to prevent malnutrition in older people and promote active and healthy ageing – the EIP-AHA nutrition action group. Advances in Public Health 2016, 5678782. doi: 10.1155/2016/5678782.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Janse, B, Huijsman, R, de Kuyper, RDM and Fabbricotti, IN (2014) The effects of an integrated care intervention for the frail elderly on informal caregivers: a quasi-experimental study. BMC Geriatrics 14, 58. doi: 10.1186/1471-2318-14-58.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jess, M, Timm, H and Dieperink, KB (2019) Video consultations in palliative care: a systematic integrative review. Palliative Medicine 33, 942958.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kellehear, A (1999) Health-promoting palliative care: developing a social model for practice. Mortality 4, 7582.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klein, C, Lang, U, Bükki, J, Sittl, R and Ostgathe, C (2011) Pain management and symptom-oriented drug therapy in palliative care. Breast Care 6, 2734.Google Scholar
Lionis, C, Papadakaki, M, Saridaki, A, Dowrick, C, O’Donnell, CA, Mair, FS, van den Muijsenbergh, M, Burns, N, de Brún, T, O’Reilly de Brún, M, van Weel-Baumgarten, E, Spiegel, W and MacFarlane, A (2016) Engaging migrants and other stakeholders to improve communication in cross-cultural consultation in primary care: a theoretically informed participatory study. BMJ Open 6, e010822. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2015-010822.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lionis, C, Shea, S and Markaki, A (2011) Introducing and implementing a compassionate care elective for medical students in Crete. Journal of Holistic Healthcare 8, 3841.Google Scholar
Loveys, K, Fricchione, G, Kolappa, K, Sagar, M and Broadbent, E (2019) Reducing patient loneliness with artificial agents: design insights from evolutionary neuropsychiatry. Journal of Medical Internet Research 21, e13664. doi: 10.2196/13664.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maher, D and Hemming, L (2005) Understanding patient and family: holistic assessment in palliative care. British Journal of Community Nursing 10, 318322.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Malcolm, M, Frost, H and Cowie, J (2019) Loneliness and social isolation causal association with health-related lifestyle risk in older adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis protocol. Systematic Reviews 8, 48. doi: 10.1186/s13643-019-0968-x.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Martín-María, N, Miret, M, Caballero, FF, Rico-Uribe, LA, Steptoe, A, Chatterji, S and Ayuso-Mateos, JL (2017) The impact of subjective well-being on mortality: a meta-analysis of longitudinal studies in the general population. Psychosomatic Medicine 79, 565575.Google Scholar
Mayahara, M, Wilbur, J, O’Mahony, S and Breitenstein, S (2017) E-pain reporter: a digital pain and analgesic diary for home hospice care. Journal of Palliative Care 32, 7784.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McEwen, BS (2016) In pursuit of resilience: stress, epigenetics, and brain plasticity. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences 1373, 5664.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McLoughlin, K, Rhatigan, J, McGilloway, S, Kellehear, A, Lucey, M, Twomey, F, Conroy, M, Herrera-Molina, E, Kumar, S, Furlong, M, Callinan, J, Watson, M, Currow, D and Bailey, C (2015) INSPIRE (INvestigating Social and PractIcal suppoRts at the End of life): pilot randomised trial of a community social and practical support intervention for adults with life-limiting illness. BMC Palliative Care 14, 65. doi: 10.1186/s12904-015-0060-9.Google Scholar
Mehta, A, Cohen, SR and Chan, LS (2009) Palliative care: a need for a family systems approach. Palliative & Supportive Care 7, 235243.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menon, A, Gray, L, Fatehi, F, Bird, D, Darssan, D, Karunanithi, M and Russell, A (2019) Mobile-based insulin dose adjustment for type 2 diabetes in community and rural populations: study protocol for a pilot randomized controlled trial. Therapeutic Advances in Endocrinology and Metabolism 10, 2042018819836647. doi: 10.1177/2042018819836647.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mitchell, M and Kan, L (2019) Digital technology and the future of health systems. Health Systems and Reform 5, 113120.Google Scholar
Mittelmark, MB, Bull, T and Bouwman, L (2017) Emerging ideas relevant to the salutogenic model of health. In Mittelmark, MB, Sagy, S and Eriksson, M et al., editors, The Handbook of salutogenesis. Cham: Springer, 4556.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moynihan, R, Oxman, A, Lavis, J and Paulsen, E (2008) Evidence-informed health policy: using research to make health systems healthier. Oslo: Knowledge Centre for the Health Services.Google Scholar
Mullick, A, Martin, J and Sallnow, L (2013) An introduction to advance care planning in practice. The BMJ 347, f6064. doi: 10.1136/bmj.f6064.Google Scholar
Nyatanga, B (2015) Engaging in reminiscence with palliative care patients. British Journal of Community Nursing 20, p. 307.Google Scholar
Osborn, R, Moulds, D, Squires, D, Doty, MM and Anderson, C (2014) International survey of older adults finds shortcomings in access, coordination, and patient-centered care. Health Affairs (Project Hope) 33, 22472255.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paggi, ME, Jopp, D and Hertzog, C (2016) The importance of leisure activities in the relationship between physical health and well-being in a life span sample. Gerontology 62, 450458.Google Scholar
Parikh, PP, White, MT, Buckingham, L and Tchorz, KM (2017) Evaluation of palliative care training and skills retention by medical students. The Journal of Surgical Research 211, 172177.Google ScholarPubMed
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) (2018) The provision of palliative care in Europe. Resolution 2249. Retrieved from http://assembly.coe.int/nw/xml/XRef/Xref-DocDetails-EN.asp?FileID=25214&lang=EN.Google Scholar
Pascale, AV, Finelli, R, Giannotti, R, Visco, V, Matula, I, Vairo, G, Ciccarelli, M, Coscioni, E and Iaccarino, G (2016) “Beyond Silos” model of homecare improves blood pressure control in multimorbid hypertensive patients. Hypertension 68(S1), AP124.Google Scholar
Pfaff, KA, Dolovich, L, Howard, M, Sattler, D, Zwarenstein, M and Marshall, D (2020) Unpacking ‘the cloud’: a framework for implementing public health approaches to palliative care. Health Promotion International 35, 160170. doi: 10.1093/heapro/day123.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Phongtankuel, V, Shalev, A, Adelman, RD, Dewald, R, Dignam, R, Baughn, R, Prigerson, HG, Teresi, J, Czaja, SJ and Reid, MC (2018) Mobile health technology is here – but are hospice informal caregivers receptive? American Journal of Hospice and Palliative Medicine® 35, 15471552.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Pilgrim, A, Robinson, S, Sayer, AA and Roberts, H (2015) An overview of appetite decline in older people. Nursing Older People 27, 2935.Google Scholar
Porter, ME and Teisberg, EO (2006) Redefining health care: creating value-based competition on results. Boston, MA: Harvard Business Press.Google Scholar
Portz, JD, Cognetta, S and Bekelman, DB (2018) Potential technology development for palliative care. Journal of Palliative Medicine 21, 899900.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Price, DM, Strodtman, L, Brough, E, Lonn, S and Luo, A (2015) Digital storytelling: an innovative technological approach to nursing education. Nurse Educator 40, 6670.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Prince-Paul, M and DiFranco, E (2017) Upstreaming and normalizing advance care planning conversations – a public health approach. Behavioral Sciences 7, E18. doi: 10.3390/bs7020018.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rao, JK, Anderson, LA, Lin, F-C and Laux, JP (2014) Completion of advance directives among US consumers. American Journal of Preventive Medicine 46, 6570.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rapacciuolo, A, Perrone Filardi, P, Cuomo, R, Mauriello, V, Quarto, M, Kisslinger, A, Savarese, G, Illario, M and Tramontano, D (2016) The impact of social and cultural engagement and dieting on well-being and resilience in a group of residents in the metropolitan area of Naples. Journal of Aging Research 2016. doi: 10.1155/2016/4768420.Google Scholar
Robison, J, Fortinsky, R, Kleppinger, A, Shugrue, N and Porter, M (2009) A broader view of family caregiving: effects of caregiving and caregiver conditions on depressive symptoms, health, work, and social isolation. The Journals of Gerontology, Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences 64, 788798.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rohleder, N, Marin, TJ, Ma, R and Miller, GE (2009) Biologic cost of caring for a cancer patient: dysregulation of pro-and anti-inflammatory signaling pathways. Journal of Clinical Oncology 27, 29092915.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rotar Pavlič, D, Aarendonk, D, Wens, J, Rodrigues Simões, JA, Lynch, M and Murray, S (2019) Palliative care in primary care: European Forum for Primary Care position paper. Primary Health Care Research and Development 20, e133. doi: 10.1017/S1463423619000641 CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ryff, CD (2014) Psychological well-being revisited: advances in the science and practice of eudaimonia. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics 83, 1028.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scheerens, C, Pype, P, Van Cauwenberg, J, Vanbutsele, G, Eecloo, K, Derom, E, Van Belle, S, Joos, G, Deliens, L and Chambaere, K (2020) Early integrated palliative home care and standard care for end-stage COPD (EPIC): a phase II pilot RCT testing feasibility, acceptability and effectiveness. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 59, 206224. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2019.09.012.Google Scholar
Sirintrapun, SJ and Lopez, AM (2018) Telemedicine in cancer care. American Society of Clinical Oncology Educational Book/ASCO 38, 540545.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Steptoe, A, Deaton, A and Stone, AA (2015) Subjective wellbeing, health, and ageing. The Lancet 385, 640648.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tai-Seale, M, Downing, NL, Jones, VG, Milani, RV, Zhao, B, Clay, B, Sharp, CD, Chan, AS and Longhurst, CA (2019) Technology-enabled consumer engagement: promising practices at four health care delivery organizations. Health Affairs (Project Hope) 38, 383390.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Thoonsen, B, Gerritzen, SH, Vissers, KC, Verhagen, S, van Weel, C, Groot, M and Engels, Y (2019) Training general practitioners contributes to the identification of palliative patients and to multidimensional care provision: secondary outcomes of an RCT. BMJ Supportive Palliative Care 9, e18. doi: 10.1136/bmjspcare-2015-001031.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tiberini, R and Richardson, H (2015) Rehabilitative palliative care: enabling people to live fully until they die; a challenge for the 21st century. UK: Hospice.Google Scholar
Tompkins, B (2018) Compassionate communities in Canada: it is everyone’s responsibility. Annals of Palliative Medicine 7(S2), S118S129.Google Scholar
Turkki, R, Byckhov, D, Lundin, M, Isola, J, Nordling, S, Kovanen, PE, Verrill, C, von Smitten, K, Joensuu, H, Lundin, J and Linder, N (2019) Breast cancer outcome prediction with tumour tissue images and machine learning. Breast Cancer Research and Treatment 177, 4152.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tziraki-Segal, C, De Luca, V, Santana, S, Tramontano, G, Romano, R, Scattola, P, Celata, C, Gelmi, G, López-Samaniego, L, Zavagli, V, Halkoaho, A, Grimes, C, Fernandes, B, Caetano Tomás, MT, Calza, L, Coppola, L, Speranza, P, Jager-Wittenaar, H, O’Caoimh, R, Pietilä, AM, Carriazo, AM, Apostolo, J, Iaccarino, G, Liotta, G, Tramontano, D, Molloy, DW, Triassi, M, Viggiani, V and Illario, M (2019) Creating a culture of health in planning and implementing innovative strategies addressing non-communicable chronic diseases. Frontiers in Sociology 4. doi: 10.3389/fsoc.2019.00009.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Veenhoven, R (2008) Healthy happiness: effects of happiness on physical health and the consequences for preventive health care. Journal of Happiness Studies 9, 449469.Google Scholar
Visco, V, Finelli, R, Pascale, AV, Giannotti, R, Fabbricatore, D, Ragosa, N, Ciccarelli, M and Iaccarino, G (2017) Larger blood pressure reduction by fixed-dose compared to free dose combination therapy of ace inhibitor and calcium antagonist in hypertensive patients. Translational Medicine @ UniSa 16, 1723.Google Scholar
Visco, V, Finelli, R, Pascale, AV, Mazzeo, P, Ragosa, N, Trimarco, V, Illario, M, Ciccarelli, M and Iaccarino, G (2018) Difficult-to-control hypertension: identification of clinical predictors and use of ICT-based integrated care to facilitate blood pressure control. Journal of Human Hypertension 32, 467476.Google Scholar
Weightman, AL, Ellis, S, Cullum, A, Sander, L and Turley, RL (2005) Grading evidence and recommendations for public health interventions: developing and piloting a framework. London: Health Development Agency.Google Scholar
Whitelaw, S and Clark, D (2019) Palliative care and public health: an asymmetrical relationship? Palliative Care: Research and Treatment 12. doi: 10.1177/1178224218819745.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2014) Strengthening of palliative care as a component of integrated treatment throughout the life course. Journal of Pain & Palliative Care Pharmacotherapy 28, 130134.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2019a) Ten Threats to Global Health in 2019. Retrieved from https://www.who.int/emergencies/ten-threats-to-global-health-in-2019.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2019b) WHO Definition of Palliative Care. Retrieved from https://www.who.int/cancer/palliative/definition/en/.Google Scholar
Zeilig, H, West, J and van der Byl Williams, M (2018) Co-creativity: possibilities for using the arts with people with a dementia. Quality in Ageing and Older Adults 19, 135145.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figure 0

Figure 1. Rethinking palliative care for chronic diseases