Assessing and responding to palliative care needs in rural sub-Saharan Africa: results from a model intervention and situation analysis in Malawi.

Palliative care is rarely accessible in rural sub-Saharan Africa. Partners In Health and the Malawi government established the Neno Palliative Care Program (NPCP) to provide palliative care in rural Neno district. We conducted a situation analysis to evaluate early NPCP outcomes and better understan...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Michael E Herce, Shekinah N Elmore, Noel Kalanga, James W Keck, Emily B Wroe, Atupere Phiri, Alishya Mayfield, Felix Chingoli, Jason A Beste, Listern Tengatenga, Junior Bazile, Eric L Krakauer, Jonas Rigodon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2014-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4197005?pdf=render
id doaj-7d611d6d669b4d188e038a32552625ac
record_format Article
spelling doaj-7d611d6d669b4d188e038a32552625ac2020-11-25T01:52:38ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032014-01-01910e11045710.1371/journal.pone.0110457Assessing and responding to palliative care needs in rural sub-Saharan Africa: results from a model intervention and situation analysis in Malawi.Michael E HerceShekinah N ElmoreNoel KalangaJames W KeckEmily B WroeAtupere PhiriAlishya MayfieldFelix ChingoliJason A BesteListern TengatengaJunior BazileEric L KrakauerJonas RigodonPalliative care is rarely accessible in rural sub-Saharan Africa. Partners In Health and the Malawi government established the Neno Palliative Care Program (NPCP) to provide palliative care in rural Neno district. We conducted a situation analysis to evaluate early NPCP outcomes and better understand palliative care needs, knowledge, and preferences.Employing rapid evaluation methodology, we collected data from 3 sources: 1) chart review of all adult patients from the NPCP's first 9 months; 2) structured interviews with patients and caregivers; 3) semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders.The NPCP enrolled 63 patients in its first 9 months. Frequent diagnoses were cancer (n = 50, 79%) and HIV/AIDS (n = 37 of 61, 61%). Nearly all (n = 31, 84%) patients with HIV/AIDS were on antiretroviral therapy. Providers registered 112 patient encounters, including 22 (20%) home visits. Most (n = 43, 68%) patients had documented pain at baseline, of whom 23 (53%) were treated with morphine. A majority (n = 35, 56%) had ≥1 follow-up encounter. Mean African Palliative Outcome Scale pain score decreased non-significantly between baseline and follow-up (3.0 vs. 2.7, p = 0.5) for patients with baseline pain and complete pain assessment documentation. Providers referred 48 (76%) patients for psychosocial services, including community health worker support, socioeconomic assistance, or both. We interviewed 36 patients referred to the NPCP after the chart review period. Most had cancer (n = 19, 53%) or HIV/AIDS (n = 10, 28%). Patients frequently reported needing income (n = 24, 67%) or food (n = 22, 61%). Stakeholders cited a need to make integrated palliative care widely available.We identified a high prevalence of pain and psychosocial needs among patients with serious chronic illnesses in rural Malawi. Early NPCP results suggest that comprehensive palliative care can be provided in rural Africa by integrating disease-modifying treatment and palliative care, linking hospital, clinic, and home-based services, and providing psychosocial support that includes socioeconomic assistance.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4197005?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael E Herce
Shekinah N Elmore
Noel Kalanga
James W Keck
Emily B Wroe
Atupere Phiri
Alishya Mayfield
Felix Chingoli
Jason A Beste
Listern Tengatenga
Junior Bazile
Eric L Krakauer
Jonas Rigodon
spellingShingle Michael E Herce
Shekinah N Elmore
Noel Kalanga
James W Keck
Emily B Wroe
Atupere Phiri
Alishya Mayfield
Felix Chingoli
Jason A Beste
Listern Tengatenga
Junior Bazile
Eric L Krakauer
Jonas Rigodon
Assessing and responding to palliative care needs in rural sub-Saharan Africa: results from a model intervention and situation analysis in Malawi.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Michael E Herce
Shekinah N Elmore
Noel Kalanga
James W Keck
Emily B Wroe
Atupere Phiri
Alishya Mayfield
Felix Chingoli
Jason A Beste
Listern Tengatenga
Junior Bazile
Eric L Krakauer
Jonas Rigodon
author_sort Michael E Herce
title Assessing and responding to palliative care needs in rural sub-Saharan Africa: results from a model intervention and situation analysis in Malawi.
title_short Assessing and responding to palliative care needs in rural sub-Saharan Africa: results from a model intervention and situation analysis in Malawi.
title_full Assessing and responding to palliative care needs in rural sub-Saharan Africa: results from a model intervention and situation analysis in Malawi.
title_fullStr Assessing and responding to palliative care needs in rural sub-Saharan Africa: results from a model intervention and situation analysis in Malawi.
title_full_unstemmed Assessing and responding to palliative care needs in rural sub-Saharan Africa: results from a model intervention and situation analysis in Malawi.
title_sort assessing and responding to palliative care needs in rural sub-saharan africa: results from a model intervention and situation analysis in malawi.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2014-01-01
description Palliative care is rarely accessible in rural sub-Saharan Africa. Partners In Health and the Malawi government established the Neno Palliative Care Program (NPCP) to provide palliative care in rural Neno district. We conducted a situation analysis to evaluate early NPCP outcomes and better understand palliative care needs, knowledge, and preferences.Employing rapid evaluation methodology, we collected data from 3 sources: 1) chart review of all adult patients from the NPCP's first 9 months; 2) structured interviews with patients and caregivers; 3) semi-structured interviews with key stakeholders.The NPCP enrolled 63 patients in its first 9 months. Frequent diagnoses were cancer (n = 50, 79%) and HIV/AIDS (n = 37 of 61, 61%). Nearly all (n = 31, 84%) patients with HIV/AIDS were on antiretroviral therapy. Providers registered 112 patient encounters, including 22 (20%) home visits. Most (n = 43, 68%) patients had documented pain at baseline, of whom 23 (53%) were treated with morphine. A majority (n = 35, 56%) had ≥1 follow-up encounter. Mean African Palliative Outcome Scale pain score decreased non-significantly between baseline and follow-up (3.0 vs. 2.7, p = 0.5) for patients with baseline pain and complete pain assessment documentation. Providers referred 48 (76%) patients for psychosocial services, including community health worker support, socioeconomic assistance, or both. We interviewed 36 patients referred to the NPCP after the chart review period. Most had cancer (n = 19, 53%) or HIV/AIDS (n = 10, 28%). Patients frequently reported needing income (n = 24, 67%) or food (n = 22, 61%). Stakeholders cited a need to make integrated palliative care widely available.We identified a high prevalence of pain and psychosocial needs among patients with serious chronic illnesses in rural Malawi. Early NPCP results suggest that comprehensive palliative care can be provided in rural Africa by integrating disease-modifying treatment and palliative care, linking hospital, clinic, and home-based services, and providing psychosocial support that includes socioeconomic assistance.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC4197005?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT michaeleherce assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT shekinahnelmore assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT noelkalanga assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT jameswkeck assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT emilybwroe assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT atuperephiri assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT alishyamayfield assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT felixchingoli assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT jasonabeste assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT listerntengatenga assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT juniorbazile assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT ericlkrakauer assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
AT jonasrigodon assessingandrespondingtopalliativecareneedsinruralsubsaharanafricaresultsfromamodelinterventionandsituationanalysisinmalawi
_version_ 1724994101297807360