Summary box
Palliative care is a human right, yet there are significant disparities in the worldwide
provision of palliative care services for individuals with life-limiting illness.
Of the 40 million people globally in need of palliative care, just 14% receive it,
largely in high-income countries.
While proven to be ‘cost-effective’ in high-income settings based on principles of
cost avoidance, the costs of illness for incurable disease in low-resource settings
is largely unknown.
The critical absence of palliative care services in low-resource settings results
in significant costs being absorbed by the individual, family and local community.
This results in intractable, devastating and perpetuating financial losses that are
passed on to future generations and function as a catalyst in the poverty cycle while
stunting local economic growth.
In considering the direct, indirect and broader societal costs of incurable disease
in low-resource countries, palliative care should be considered as a poverty-reduction
strategy.
Palliative care is the active improvement in quality of life and relief of suffering
for patients with incurable disease.1 Despite being recognised as a human right by
the WHO,1 the United Nations Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights2 and
the International Covenant for Economic, Social and Cultural Rights,3
4 there are significant disparities in the worldwide provision of palliative care
services for individuals with life-limiting illnesses. Of the 40 million people globally
in need of palliative care, just 14% receive it, most of whom are adults and children
in high-income countries (HICs).5
6 For the millions of individuals who die without palliative care, largely in low-income
countries, end of life is typically marked by pain and suffering. This is due in part
to the unavailability of oral analgesia7–10 but also more generally, to the fragility
of health systems in low-resource settings.11 Particular barriers to the integration
of palliative care in low-resource settings include lack of awareness by policymakers,
health professionals and the public, of what palliative care is and the benefits it
can offer patients and health systems. Additional barriers include cultural and social
beliefs about death and dying, misconceptions that palliative care is only for patients
with cancer, for those in their last days or weeks of life, and finally, the misconception
that improving access to opioid analgesia could lead to increased substance abuse.
Cost of illness (COI) represents the total economic burden of a disease on society
and is comprised of direct and indirect costs. Direct costs measure the resources
used to treat illness (staff time, radiotherapy, chemotherapy, advanced imaging) while
indirect costs usually measure lost productivity (the patient or family member taking
time off of work or school).12 In HIC, dramatic increases in COI are common as the
incurable disease progresses. In these settings, palliative care offers a resource-sparing
alternative while simultaneously improving quality of life.13–17 Due in large part
to this empirical evidence and the established cost-effectiveness of palliative care
in some HIC, the provision of palliative care in these locations has continued to
increase over the past several decades.18
Far less well understood is the COI of incurable diseases in low-resource settings.
The authors have worked in palliative care in low-income and middle-income countries
(LMICs) over the past 20 years. LG established one of the first rural hospital-based
palliative care services in Kenya at Chogoria Hospital in the 1990s, and has led many
research programmes on integration of palliative care into health systems in sub-Saharan
Africa. REA is a Global Health fellow studying the value of global palliative care
as a poverty reduction strategy.
Fragile health systems lack the safety nets of health insurance schemes, social support
programmes and critically, palliative care services for patients with incurable disease.
This results in tremendous costs of care that are inevitably absorbed by the individual,
family and local community. For example, in a cohort of patients with cancer in Ethiopia,
we found that reported medical costs, including medications, treatments and travel
to health facilities, necessitated the sale of livestock, homes, wedding gold, as
well as pulling children from school as the fees became unaffordable. In studies conducted
in Malawi, Kenya, Rwanda, Uganda and Zambia, we identified that families prioritised
the immediate need to seek for cures for their ill family member over saving funds
for future household costs. The reluctance of clinical staff to break bad news about
illness progression and prognosis contributed to this prioritisation of a search for
a cure.
We have observed staggering direct and indirect costs of care for incurable disease
in LMIC, which ultimately result in intractable, devastating and perpetuating financial
losses that are passed on to future generations. Examples of direct costs include
out-of-pocket expenses for medical visits, procedures, purchase of medications and
transportation, any of which individually may be greater than a monthly salary. Homes,
livestock, wedding gold and other important assets are often sold to pay for the direct
costs of medical care. Understandably, the sale of these assets may cause a family
struggling with poverty to slip into destitution.19
Indirect costs are harder to measure but comprise a significant burden of the cost
of care for patients, their families and local communities. Common sources are missed
wages from the patient who is too ill to work and often a second lost wage from the
family member staying with the patient to provide care. Other indirect costs include
a reduction in future earning potential due to the sale of assets such as livestock
and farmland, to cope with direct costs, and lost opportunities for young people who
are pulled out of school at a young age to care for ill adults or because school fees
become unaffordable due to medical expenses. These factors have a negative impact
not just on family wealth but also on the local economy.20
In small-scale economies, material wealth strongly predicts the wealth of offspring
via intergenerational wealth transfer. Ultimately, when parents lose their wealth
to medical costs, future generations are gravely affected: small-scale economies lack
the potential for important individual earnings over a lifetime—the most significant
form of wealth is inherited.21
The poverty cycle is a phenomenon by which impoverished families remain impoverished
for three or more generations because they lack the resources necessary to exit the
cycle. This is most often because they have used these resources to pay for expenses
such as a death or illness. The lack of financial resources parallels a lack of other
capital, such as educational and social connections, which in turn pushes the family
even further into poverty.22 This has been shown to be true for chronic disease in
LMICs, where the constant care and treatment required, and the length of illness (years
rather than days) reduces the patient and families' capacity to purchase adequate
drugs, or to earn money working.
Indeed, similarities exist between the chronic disease economic model and that for
incurable disease: chronic disease simultaneously destroys the internal family resources
and stunts local economic growth.4 The WHO has conceded that “existing knowledge underestimates
the implications of chronic diseases for poverty and the potential that chronic disease
prevention and health promotion have for alleviating poverty in low and middle income
countries.”23 They conclude that investment in chronic disease prevention programmes
is essential to reduce poverty. We propose that investing in palliative care is just
as essential to reducing poverty in LMICs. Similar to chronic disease, patients with
incurable disease also face substantial costs, and the lack of access to palliative
care services in these settings functions as a catalyst in the poverty cycle.
Global cancer care is perhaps the best example of a rigorous health economic model
adapted and applied to LMICs.24 Strategies such as prevention, screening, capacity
building and treatment form the cornerstones. Similarly rigorous economic models for
palliative care delivery in LMICs are lacking, with most models from HICs where palliative
care has been shown to be cost-effective based on the principle of cost avoidance
(avoiding expensive, non-beneficial therapies at end of life). Yet this model fails
in low-resource settings where the alternative is no care. The potential benefit palliative
care can offer patients, their children, grandchildren and local economy lies in mitigation
of the costs of illness and suffering, rather than avoidance of costs of expensive
treatment.25 On a societal level, palliative care can serve as a health system expander
in offering patients with incurable disease the possibility of care within their homes,
thereby reserving hospital-based care, with its limited resource of nurses, doctors
and supplies for patients with potentially reversible illness.
Hand-in-hand with the lack of economic models for sustainable and cost-effective delivery
of palliative care is buy-in from leading international global health institutions.
The African Palliative Care Association is actively working to increase palliative
care delivery and address the deficiency in regional and national palliative care
policies.26 However, until palliative care is globally recognised as a sustainable,
cost-effective intervention, it will not be recognised as a priority goal, and will
continue to be underdeveloped and underfunded in the face of escalating need.
Though many LMICs have inverted pyramids with significant numbers of young people,
there are also many nations with rising numbers of elderly who are living longer than
ever. Non-communicable diseases, including cancer, are rising fastest in low-resource
settings.27 Chronic disease, incurable disease and disability have become a reality
for millions, and there has never been a more opportune time to invest in planning
and development strategies to help care for them.
Through the tireless efforts of many visionaries working to strengthen palliative
care and the 2014 World Health Assembly Resolution there has been an increase in palliative
care services, yet need far outweighs supply, and supply still remains too heavily
dependent on external funding rather than integrated health sector expenditure. It
is difficult to think about putting an actual economic value on the relief of human
suffering. Yet this financial estimate is necessary to ultimately promote the expansion
and longevity of palliative care services in LMICs. Demonstrating the economic value
of palliative care in LMICs, through the development of a health economic model for
delivery, is key to sustainability. This in turn is crucial to guiding healthcare
policy and gaining momentum for increasing government-sponsored and locally run palliative
care services. Our group is actively engaging health economists with international
palliative care providers and consultants to construct this model. We believe that
it is more costly not to have palliative care in low-resource settings, and that when
palliative care services are incorporated into the health system, they can be delivered
for minimal financial cost but enormous physical, emotional and social benefit per
patient. Therefore, coordinated, international funding should focus on the widespread
development and integration of palliative care services within local health systems,
securing this human right for all.