Episode Summary
This episode examines palliative care as a critical health system indicator, revealing structural inequities in access to essential medicines and end-of-life care services. Drawing on peer-reviewed research, the discussion explores how palliative care availability reflects broader gaps in universal health coverage (UHC), service delivery, and governance—using Georgia as a compelling case study of a health system navigating reform while addressing unmet palliative care needs affecting millions globally.
Key Topics Discussed
- Global Palliative Care Burden: Over 61 million people annually experience serious health-related suffering, yet only 14% receive adequate palliative care worldwide
- Opioid Access Inequity: Concentration of analgesic medications in high-income countries leaves 80% of the global population underserved, creating significant treatment disparities
- Health System Indicators: Palliative care serves as a tracer of equity, continuity of care, and access to essential medicines within healthcare systems
- Georgia's Structural Barriers: Limited geographic coverage, urban concentration of services, and workforce capacity gaps impede palliative care integration
- Regulatory Constraints: Administrative and governance obstacles affecting opioid accessibility and mainstream healthcare delivery in transitional health systems
- Universal Health Coverage Framework: Palliative care positioned as essential component of person-centered, equitable health systems
Key Takeaways
- Palliative care is not merely a clinical service but a health system performance indicator revealing equity, access, and governance strengths and weaknesses
- Unmet palliative care need reflects systemic gaps in service delivery and health system design that demand policy-level intervention
- Georgia demonstrates the challenges facing health systems in transition, where palliative care remains underdeveloped despite broader reform initiatives
- Addressing global opioid access disparities requires regulatory reform and integration of palliative care into universal health coverage frameworks
- Community-based palliative care services and workforce development are essential for reducing regional inequities and improving health outcomes
About This Episode
Palliative care remains critically underrecognized within health system performance discussions, despite its centrality to universal health coverage and equity. This episode reframes palliative care as a tracer indicator of health system functionality, examining how access barriers in Georgia—including limited geographic coverage, workforce shortages, and regulatory constraints—mirror global challenges in providing essential end-of-life care. By analyzing peer-reviewed evidence, the discussion connects clinical practice to health policy implications, demonstrating why palliative care integration is fundamental to building resilient, person-centered health systems capable of addressing serious health-related suffering across diverse populations.
In this episode, we shift from global migration health systems to a critical but often under-recognised dimension of health system performance: palliative care.
Building on broader discussions of equity, access, and system resilience, this episode examines how the availability and accessibility of palliative care reflect deeper structural strengths and weaknesses within healthcare systems.
Drawing on peer-reviewed research by Sharvari Patil and Sulkhan Inaishvili, we present a structured, evidence-informed analysis of palliative care in Georgia.
Key insights include:
• The global burden of serious health-related suffering, affecting more than 61 million people annually
• WHO estimates that only ~14% of those in need receive palliative care worldwide
• Concentration of opioid access in a small number of high-income countries, leaving over 80% of the global population underserved
• Structural barriers in Georgia, including limited geographic coverage and urban concentration of services
• Gaps in workforce capacity, training, and integration into mainstream healthcare delivery
• Regulatory and administrative constraints affecting access to opioid analgesics
Palliative care is increasingly recognised as a core component of universal health coverage (UHC) and people-centred health systems.
This episode reframes palliative care not only as a clinical service, but as a health system indicator—a tracer of:
• Equity
• Continuity of care
• Access to essential medicines
Unmet need in palliative care reveals systemic gaps in:
• Service delivery
• Governance
• Health system design
Georgia provides a compelling case study of a health system in transition. Despite ongoing reforms, palliative care remains insufficiently developed, with limited community-based services, regulatory barriers, and uneven regional access.
Patil S, Inaishvili S.
Palliative Care as a Health System Indicator in Georgia: Unmet Need, Access Barriers, and Policy Implications.
Georgian Medical Journal. 2026;1(1):14–34
DOI: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19050661
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The Georgian Medical Journal Podcast is the official knowledge translation platform of the Georgian Medical Journal (GMJ), designed to bridge scientific evidence with policy and practice.
Each episode translates peer-reviewed research into accessible, policy-relevant insights for clinicians, researchers, and decision-makers worldwide.
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