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Palliative Medicine
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The attitude of health care professionals toward the availability of hospice services for cancer patients and their carers in Saudi Arabia

A S Almuzaini

M S Salek

P J Nicholls

Medicines Research Unit, Welsh School of Pharmacy, University of Wales, Cardiff

B A Alomar

College of Administrative Science, Department of Public Administration, King Saud University, Riyadh

The main objectives of this study were to assess cancer care and the need for establishing hospice/palliative care for cancer patients and their carers in Saudi Arabia. Six-hundred-and-ninety-five participants (136 cancer patients, 161 informal carers, and 398 health care professionals) were recruited from oncology centres in four major regions of Saudi Arabia. Each group was asked to complete a questionnaire specifically designed to meet the aims of the study. The data obtained from the three different questionnaires indicated that the level of cancer care in the Ministry of Health hospitals was poor compared to other hospitals such as the King Faisal Specialist Hospital and Research Centre, military hospitals or university hospitals in the kingdom, perhaps due to the absence of home care services or periodic follow-up by their regional hospitals. It was also reported that the shortage of drugs used in cancer management, the severe restriction of prescribing narcotic analgesics and lack of cancer care knowledge were the major impediments to providing good cancer care. Thus, the strong inter-relationship among Saudi families, the present poor status of cancer care, cancer patients' and their carers' acceptability of hospice services and of the willingness of health care professionals to receive training in palliative care, illustrate the need for initiating the provision of palliative care services in the Saudi health system.

Key Words: palliative care • hospices • attitude • cancer care facilities • Saudi Arabia • Islam

Palliative Medicine, Vol. 12, No. 5, 365-373 (1998)
DOI: 10.1191/026921698667234126


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