Published 3 February 2009, doi:10.1136/bmj.b183
Cite this as: BMJ 2009;338:b183
Research
Vulnerability and access to care for South Asian Sikh and Muslim patients with life limiting illness in Scotland: prospective longitudinal qualitative study
Allison Worth, senior research fellow1,
Tasneem Irshad, research fellow1,
Raj Bhopal, Bruce and John Usher professor of public health1,
Duncan Brown, consultant in palliative medicine2,
Julia Lawton, senior research fellow1,
Elizabeth Grant, research fellow1,
Scott Murray, professor1,
Marilyn Kendall, research fellow1,
James Adam, consultant in palliative medicine3,
Rafik Gardee, former director4,
Aziz Sheikh, professor of primary care research and development1
1 Primary Palliative Care Research Group, Centre for Population Health Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9DX,
2 St Columbas Hospice, Edinburgh,
3 Marie Curie Hospice, Glasgow,
4 National Resource Centre for Ethnic Minority Health, Glasgow
Correspondence to: A Sheikh Aziz.Sheikh{at}ed.ac.uk
Objectives To examine the care experiences of South Asian Sikh
and Muslim patients in Scotland with life limiting illness and
their families and to understand the reasons for any difficulties
with access to services and how these might be overcome.
Design Prospective, longitudinal, qualitative design using in-depth interviews.
Setting Central Scotland.
Participants 25 purposively selected South Asian Sikh and Muslim patients, 18 family carers, and 20 key health professionals.
Results 92 interviews took place. Most services struggled to deliver responsive, culturally appropriate care. Barriers to accessing effective end of life care included resource constrained services; institutional and, occasionally, personal racial and religious discrimination; limited awareness and understanding among South Asian people of the role of hospices; and difficulty discussing death. The most vulnerable patients, including recent migrants and those with poor English language skills, with no family advocate, and dying of non-malignant diseases were at particularly high risk of inadequate care.
Conclusions Despite a robust Scottish diversity policy, services for South Asian Sikh and Muslim patients with life limiting illness were wanting in many key areas. Active case management of the most vulnerable patients and carers, and "real time" support, from where professionals can obtain advice specific to an individual patient and family, are the approaches most likely to instigate noticeable improvements in access to high quality end of life care. Improving access to palliative care for all, particularly those with non-malignant illnesses, as well as focusing on the specific needs of ethnic minority groups, is required.

CiteULike
Complore
Connotea
Del.icio.us
Digg
Reddit
StumbleUpon
Technorati What's this?
Relevant Articles
-
Use of multiperspective qualitative interviews to understand patients and carers beliefs, experiences, and needs
- Marilyn Kendall, Scott A Murray, Emma Carduff, Allison Worth, Fiona Harris, Anna Lloyd, Debbie Cavers, Liz Grant, Kirsty Boyd, and Aziz Sheikh
BMJ 2009 339: b4122.
[Full Text]
-
Use of serial qualitative interviews to understand patients evolving experiences and needs
- Scott A Murray, Marilyn Kendall, Emma Carduff, Allison Worth, Fiona M Harris, Anna Lloyd, Debbie Cavers, Liz Grant, and Aziz Sheikh
BMJ 2009 339: b3702.
[Full Text]
-
Exploring preferences for place of death with terminally ill patients: qualitative study of experiences of general practitioners and community nurses in England
- Daniel Munday, Mila Petrova, and Jeremy Dale
BMJ 2009 339: b2391.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
-
End of life care in ethnic minorities
- Mark R D Johnson
BMJ 2009 338: a2989.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
-
Improving generalist end of life care: national consultation with practitioners, commissioners, academics, and service user groups
- Cathy Shipman, Marjolein Gysels, Patrick White, Allison Worth, Scott A Murray, Stephen Barclay, Sarah Forrest, Jonathan Shepherd, Jeremy Dale, Steve Dewar, Marilyn Peters, Suzanne White, Alison Richardson, Karl Lorenz, Jonathan Koffman, and Irene J Higginson
BMJ 2008 337: a1720.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
-
Grounded theory, mixed methods, and action research
- Lorelei Lingard, Mathieu Albert, and Wendy Levinson
BMJ 2008 337: a567.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
-
Care for all at the end of life
- Scott A Murray and Aziz Sheikh
BMJ 2008 336: 958-959.
[Full Text]
[PDF]
-
Key challenges and ways forward in researching the "good death": qualitative in-depth interview and focus group study
- Marilyn Kendall, Fiona Harris, Kirsty Boyd, Aziz Sheikh, Scott A Murray, Duncan Brown, Ian Mallinson, Nora Kearney, and Allison Worth
BMJ 2007 334: 521.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
-
Should Muslims have faith based health services?
- Aziz Sheikh
BMJ 2007 334: 74.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
-
Palliative care needs of minorities
- A Rashid Gatrad, Erica Brown, Hardev Notta, and Aziz Sheikh
BMJ 2003 327: 176-177.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
-
Patient centred death
- Jocalyn Clark
BMJ 2003 327: 174-175.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
-
Dying of lung cancer or cardiac failure: prospective qualitative interview study of patients and their carers in the community
- Scott A Murray, Kirsty Boyd, Marilyn Kendall, Allison Worth, T Fred Benton, and Hans Clausen
BMJ 2002 325: 929.
[Abstract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
-
Qualitative research in health care: Analysing qualitative data
- Catherine Pope, Sue Ziebland, and Nicholas Mays
BMJ 2000 320: 114-116.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
[PDF]
-
How To Do It: Use facilitated case discussions for significant event auditing
- L A Robinson, R Stacy, J A Spencer, and R S Bhopal
BMJ 1995 311: 315-318.
[Extract]
[Full Text]
This article has been cited by other articles:
-
Kendall, M., Murray, S. A, Carduff, E., Worth, A., Harris, F., Lloyd, A., Cavers, D., Grant, L., Boyd, K., Sheikh, A.
(2009). Use of multiperspective qualitative interviews to understand patients' and carers' beliefs, experiences, and needs. BMJ
339: b4122-b4122
[Full text]
-
Murray, S. A, Kendall, M., Carduff, E., Worth, A., Harris, F. M, Lloyd, A., Cavers, D., Grant, L., Sheikh, A.
(2009). Use of serial qualitative interviews to understand patients' evolving experiences and needs. BMJ
339: b3702-b3702
[Full text]
-
Sheikh, A.
(2009). Ethnic minorities and their perceptions of the quality of primary care. BMJ
339: b3797-b3797
[Full text]
-
Munday, D., Petrova, M., Dale, J.
(2009). Exploring preferences for place of death with terminally ill patients: qualitative study of experiences of general practitioners and community nurses in England. BMJ
339: b2391-b2391
[Abstract]
[Full text]
-
Johnson, M. R D
(2009). End of life care in ethnic minorities. BMJ
338: a2989-a2989
[Full text]
Rapid Responses:
Read all Rapid Responses
- The Ethics of Research and Accusations of Racism
- Paul W Keeley
bmj.com, 2 Mar 2009
[Full text]
- Authors' response Re: The Ethics of Research and Accusations of Racism
- Aziz Sheikh, et al.
bmj.com, 9 Mar 2009
[Full text]
- The upside of caregiving
- David C Currow, et al.
bmj.com, 28 Jul 2009
[Full text]