30-Second Takeaway
- Primary palliative care by trained hepatologists can match specialist-led outcomes for end-stage liver disease, supporting scalable models.
- Most GP-referred patients access specialist palliative care late and briefly, underscoring the need for earlier, needs-based referrals.
- Patients with severe mental disorders receive lower-quality, shorter specialist palliative care, highlighting urgent equity gaps.
- AYAs choosing MAID often experience escalating symptom burden and late palliative referrals, suggesting missed opportunities for earlier support.
- Targeted training, innovative transitions programs, and culturally attuned grief interventions can strengthen systems across the continuum.
Week ending April 18, 2026
Scaling high-quality palliative care while addressing inequities, timing, and bereavement needs across serious illness trajectories
Trained hepatologists deliver noninferior palliative care for end-stage liver disease
End-stage liver disease patients had similar 3‑month QoL gains whether palliative care was delivered by trained hepatologists or palliative specialists. Both arms used a structured checklist and four visits over three months, with clinically meaningful QoL improvements on FACT‑Hep. The hepatologist group met prespecified noninferiority criteria for QoL change compared with specialist palliative care. Symptom burden, distress, depression, satisfaction, and mortality did not clearly favor either model in this abstract. These data support primary palliative care training for hepatologists when specialist capacity is limited.
GP-referred patients receive brief specialist palliative care, often only in the last months of life
Among over 25,000 GP-referred patients in Australia, most entered community-based rather than inpatient specialist palliative care. Over 80% of deaths occurred within three months of specialist palliative care commencement, indicating late referral or acceptance. Inpatient utilization was more common in patients with cancer and distress from breathlessness, nausea, or psychological and spiritual issues. Shorter palliative care duration was associated with inpatient care, functional decline, pain, breathlessness, and family or carer problems. Findings support earlier, needs-based referral pathways from primary care and attention to caregiver distress in triage decisions.
Severe mental disorders linked to poorer-quality and shorter specialist palliative care
Only 4.3% of decedents in Danish specialist palliative care had pre-existing severe mental disorders, yet they died younger and more often from non-cancer causes. Patients with severe mental disorders were less likely to complete symptom assessments, indicating gaps in routine quality processes. Those receiving active psychiatric treatment had longer waits for palliative care and shorter overall palliative care pathways. These inequities suggest structural and clinical barriers to timely referral and full engagement in multidisciplinary care. Services should proactively identify patients with severe mental disorders and adapt assessment processes to support participation.
MAID among AYAs with cancer occurs after late palliative care and escalating symptoms
In Alberta, 34 adolescents and young adults with cancer received MAID, with provisions peaking in 2020. Half accessed specialist palliative care less than three months before death, despite often prolonged trajectories after advanced diagnosis. Symptom burden increased steadily in the year before death, with marked acceleration around five months prior to MAID. Most had high symptom complexity in the last month, driven by tiredness, poor well-being, pain, and drowsiness. Qualitative data highlighted social isolation, prior exposure to cancer death, desire for control, and death acceptance as key themes.
References
Numbered in order of appearance. Click any reference to view details.
Additional Reads
Optional additional studies from this edition.