Developing research priorities for palliative care in Colombia: a priority setting partnership approach

Tracey McConnell*, Cindy V. Mendieta, Esther de Vries, Jose A. Calvache, Gillian Prue, Sam Ahmedzai, Joanne Reid

*Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

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Abstract

Background
A recent Lancet commission called for more research on palliative care in low- and middle-income (LMIC) countries such as Colombia. A research priority setting approach has been recommended by The Global Forum for Health Research to address the huge gap in research output between LMIC and high-income countries, with influential health service bodies recommending the active involvement of non-research expert stakeholders in establishing research priorities to address service user needs.

Method
Priority setting partnership (PSP) following the four stages of the James Lind Alliance methodology; establishing the partnership, identifying evidence uncertainties, refining questions and uncertainties, and prioritization. Data from MS forms were analysed using descriptive statistics.

Results
A total of 33 stakeholders attended an online PSP workshop and completed the Mentimeter exercise in Microsoft Teams. A total of 48 attended the subsequent in person prioritisation exercise in urban Bogota (n = 22) and rural Popayan (n = 25). The stakeholders were a diverse group of health professionals (physicians, medical students, nurses, dentists, physiotherapists, nutritionist, occupational and speech therapists), financial and administrative staff and patients with life-limiting illness and caregivers. Top research priorities included patient and caregiver needs, service provider education and training, and better integration of palliative care with cancer and non-cancer services. The key challenges included a lack of interest in palliative care research, along with funding, time and resource constraints. Key solutions included collaboration across disciplines and settings, highlighting benefits of palliative research to help secure adequate resources, and multicentre, mixed method research, with patient involvement from the research development stage.

Conclusion
The findings of this PSP should be disseminated among palliative care associations worldwide to inform international multicentre studies, and among governmental and nongovernmental organisations that promote research in Colombia. A focus on patient and family caregiver palliative care needs in Colombia should be prioritised.

Original languageEnglish
Article number194
Number of pages9
JournalBMC Palliative Care
Volume23
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01 Aug 2024

Keywords

  • Palliative Care
  • Consensus Methods
  • Nominal Group Technique
  • Priority Setting Partnership
  • Colombia
  • Humans
  • Research priorities
  • Research
  • Health Priorities

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