Bridging gaps to universal palliative care access in Chile: Serious health-related suffering and the cost of expanding the package of care services Journal Article


Authors: Pérez-Cruz, P. E.; Undurraga, E.; Arreola-Ornelas, H.; Corsi, O.; Jiang Kwete, X. X.; Krakauer, E. L.; Rosa, W. E.; Knaul, F. M.
Article Title: Bridging gaps to universal palliative care access in Chile: Serious health-related suffering and the cost of expanding the package of care services
Abstract: Background: The Lancet Commission on Palliative Care (PC) and Pain Relief quantified the burden of serious health-related suffering (SHS), proposing an Essential Package of PC (EPPC) to narrow the global PC divide. We applied the EPPC framework to analyze PC access in Chile, identify gaps in coverage, and provide recommendations to improve PC access. Methods: Total SHS and population in need of PC was estimated using official 2019 government data. We differentiated between cancer and non-cancer related SHS given guaranteed Chilean PC coverage for cancer. We calculated differences between the Chilean PC package and the Lancet Commission EPPC to estimate the cost of expanding to achieve national coverage of palliative care. Findings: In 2019, nearly 105,000 decedent and non-decedent Chileans experienced SHS with a lower-bound estimate of 12.1 million days and an upper-bound estimate of 42.4 million days of SHS. Each individual experienced between 116 and 520 days of SHS per year. People living with a cancer diagnosis had PC access with financial protection, accounting for almost 42% of patients in need. People with non-cancer diagnoses—about 61 thousand patients–lacked PC coverage. Expanding coverage of the EPPC for all patients in need would cost just above $123 million USD, equivalent to 0.47% of Chilean National Health Expenditure. Interpretation: Achieving universal PC access is urgent and feasible for Chile, classified as a high-income country. Expanding PC services and coverage to the EPPC standard are affordable and critical health system responses to ensuring financial protection for patients with SHS. In Chile, this requires closing large gaps in PC coverage pertaining to patients with non-cancer conditions and treatment of symptoms that go beyond pain. Our research provides an empirical approach for applying the Lancet Commission SHS framework to estimate the cost of achieving national universal PC access anchored in a package of health care services. Funding: This research was partially funded by the Chilean Government through the Fondo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (Fondecyt Regular) grant number 1201721, the U.S. Cancer Pain Relief Committee grant AWD-003806 awarded to the University of Miami and by the University of Miami Institute for Advanced Study of the Americas. We acknowledge NIH/NCI award P30CA008748. © 2022
Keywords: palliative care; health policy; delivery of health care; latin america; chile; cancer; universal health coverage
Journal Title: The Lancet Regional Health - Americas
Volume: 19
ISSN: 2667-193X
Publisher: The Lancet Publishing Group  
Date Published: 2023-03-01
Start Page: 100425
Language: English
DOI: 10.1016/j.lana.2022.100425
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC10025417
PUBMED: 36950031
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- MSK Cancer Center Support Grant (P30 CA008748) acknowledged in PDF -- Export Date: 1 February 2023 -- Source: Scopus
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  1. William   Rosa
    199 Rosa