Top 10 tips palliative care clinicians should know about messaging for the public Editorial


Authors: Back, A. L.; Rotella, J. D.; Dashti, A.; DeBartolo, K.; Rosa, W. E.; October, T. W.; Grant, M. S.
Title: Top 10 tips palliative care clinicians should know about messaging for the public
Abstract: When speaking to public audiences, palliative care advocates often reach for personal experiences of great meaning and significance in their own lives, and often distill those experiences to a key message. However, this approach may not be the most effective way to engage a public audience whose closest experience with palliative care is based on social media or third-hand stories. Research demonstrates that the lay public often starts with inaccurate assumptions about palliative care, including that it is only for people at end of life. These misunderstandings can lead people with serious illness to decline palliative care services that are backed by evidence and demonstrate real benefit. This phenomenon of "declines based on inaccurate assumptions" is widely seen in clinical practice and palliative care demonstration projects. Public messaging is an evidencebased approach to engage more effectively with the public when doing outreach for palliative care. The 10 tips provided are based on a multiyear and multiorganizational project focused on improving the messaging of palliative care for the public. As palliative care services are increasingly expanded and integrated into health systems, public messaging can provide a new approach for building partnerships with the public by offering messages that consistently meet their needs based on their current perceptions. Incorporating public-informed messaging strategies could enable palliative care clinicians and advocates to address the lay public with greater confidence and clarity about how palliative care can serve them, their families, and their communities. © 2024 Mary Ann Liebert Inc.. All rights reserved.
Keywords: clinical practice; palliative care; transcription initiation; palliative therapy; death; communication; personal experience; speech; perception; social media; humans; human; article; inaccurate assumptions; palliative care advocates; public messaging; public perception
Journal Title: Journal of Palliative Medicine
Volume: 27
Issue: 3
ISSN: 1096-6218
Publisher: Mary Ann Liebert, Inc  
Date Published: 2024-03-01
Start Page: 405
End Page: 410
Language: English
DOI: 10.1089/jpm.2023.0533
PUBMED: 37738320
PROVIDER: scopus
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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  1. William   Rosa
    199 Rosa