Patient Perceptions of Palliative Care in Surgery: A Qualitative Study

Author Department

Surgery

Document Type

Article, Peer-reviewed

Publication Date

2-2026

Abstract

Context: Despite professional guidelines encouraging integration, palliative care (PC) remains underutilized among surgical patients.

Objectives: We sought to characterize contextual factors influencing PC integration in surgical practice from the patient perspective.

Methods: We used a combination of ethnographic observations and semi-structured interviews with seriously ill older adults to explore perceptions of and behaviors related to PC among patients undergoing surgery.

Results: Across 207 observations and 19 interviews, we identified that patients were either unaware of PC or equated it with end-of-life care, believing that pursuing PC would mean forgoing surgery or efforts at recovery. Patients were nevertheless observed elevating concerns related to PC domains, including social or psychological burdens, during visits with surgeons. When presented with a comprehensive definition of PC, some patients were receptive to increased integration with surgery whereas others preferred that their surgeons contribute only technical expertise.

Conclusions: Our results offer new perspectives on established findings, including that patients equate PC with hospice and end-of-life treatments. While patients in our study endorsed these same attitudes, they also exhibited interest in discussing broad domains of PC with their surgeons, highlighting further opportunities for integration.

Keywords: palliative care; qualitative study; surgery.

PMID

41763336

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