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Volume 36, Issue 5, Pages 505-512 (November 2008)


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Just Palliative Care: Responding Responsibly to the Suffering of the Poor

Eric L. Krakauer, MD, PhDCorresponding Author Informationemail address

Accepted 5 December 2007.

Abstract 

The disproportionate suffering of the world's poor from AIDS and cancer has generated efforts to promote palliative care as an affordable alternative to expensive disease-modifying therapies. These well-intentioned efforts stem from a wish to respond to the suffering of the poor as quickly and widely as possible and from the view that only inexpensive interventions are feasible in poor settings. Such efforts also may be informed by the cautious attitude of palliative care in rich countries toward disease-modifying treatments for patients with advanced life-threatening illnesses. Yet, acceptance of unequal access for the poor to life-saving medical services that are badly needed and potentially feasible is unjust. Although palliative interventions to relieve the disproportionate physical, psychological, and social suffering of the poor are essential, they should be integrated with preventive and disease-modifying interventions for major killers, such as acquired immunodeficiency syndrome and cancer.

Departments of Medicine and Social Medicine and Center for Palliative Care, Harvard Medical School; and Palliative Care Service, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston, Massachusetts, USA

Corresponding Author InformationAddress correspondence to: Eric L. Krakauer, MD, PhD, Department of Social Medicine, Harvard Medical School, 641 Huntington Avenue, Boston, MA 02115, USA.

PII: S0885-3924(08)00488-0

doi:10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2007.11.015


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