(Press-News.org) Nearly all the world’s 10.6 million children experiencing serious health-related suffering (SHS) live in low- and middle-income countries with little to no access to palliative care specialized care for their illness, according to a comprehensive new report published in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health.
The study defines SHS as physical, psychological, social or spiritual pain and distress linked to life-threatening or life-limiting conditions, as introduced by the Lancet Commission on Global Access to Palliative Care and Pain Relief. The findings reveal a dramatic shift: most children in need of palliative care now live longer with severe, chronic illness, fundamentally changing the type of services needed and extending the duration of these services. Led by the UCLA Research Hub on Global Access to Palliative Care and Pain Relief, the study reflects a global collaboration among authors from various academic institutions and international organizations.
Why it matters
According to the researchers, children’s unmet palliative care need represents a significant global health challenge, lacking sufficient resources. The Lancet commission previously estimated that $1 million per year would be sufficient to cover pain medications for all children ages 0-14 years in need who live in low-income countries. Yet paediatric palliative care, an equity imperative that ensures access to palliative services for every child experiencing SLS, remains severely underfunded and overlooked. This leaves millions of children and their families, the majority of whom are living in poverty, very vulnerable.
What the study did
The study applies an updated and child-specific methodology for estimating SHS, building on the framework introduced by The Lancet commission. Researchers analyzed data from the Global Burden of Disease Study 2023 and convened an international expert panel in paediatric palliative care to identify health conditions that are symptom burden specific to children. The panel used this to t estimate the number of children experiencing SHS. The team analyzed 21 health conditions across all country income levels, age groups and regions, producing the most comprehensive global assessment to date of children’s palliative care needs.
What they found
The study found that 10.6 million children experienced serious health-related suffering in 2023, representing 14% of all individuals experiencing such suffering globally. A striking 96%, or nearly 10.2 million, of these children live in low- and middle-income countries.
The research revealed a major shift over 30 years: in 1990, 59% of children with SHS and in need of palliative care were living with chronic conditions rather than facing end of life, but by 2023, this rose to 81%. Researchers attribute this shift primarily to the reduction in children living with HIV, particularly in low- and middle-income countries, along with broader health-system improvements.
The three leading causes of SHS were endocrine, metabolic, blood and immune disorders (EMBID) (51%), premature birth and birth trauma (18%), and injuries (7%). Across all income groups, EMBID and premature birth and birth trauma were leading causes. The third leading cause varied by income level: HIV in low-income. countries; congenital malformations in lower-middle-income countries; leukaemia in upper-middle-income countries; and injury, poisoning, and other external causes in high-income countries.
From 1990 to 2023, low-income countries saw a 34% increase in children needing palliative care, while high-income countries experienced a 36% decrease.
What’s next
The findings provide critical evidence to guide policy development and resource allocation for children’s palliative care globally. Researchers emphasize the urgent need for health system strengthening, particularly in low- and middle-income countries where needs are concentrated. Future work should include more detailed analysis by age subgroups, incorporate patient and family perspectives and address the long-term effects of COVID-19. It will also be important to continue to refine the methodology to reflect longer duration of palliative care needs in children and hence increasing numbers of children in need. The research team recommends integrating palliative care into universal health coverage schemes, ensuring access to essential medicines including child appropriate opioid formulations, and expanding competency-based training programs for health professionals at all levels.
From the experts
“The suffering of children, especially those living in poverty, has been largely invisible in global health policy,” said co-lead author Dr. Felicia Marie Knaul, distinguished professor of medicine at UCLA Health’s David Geffen School of Medicine. “Our findings underscore the urgent need to expand access to high-quality paediatric palliative care. As more children live longer with serious illness, health systems can and must respond with adequately funded, child-specific policies to reduce the avoidable burden of suffering.”
About the study “The global need for paediatric palliative care: an analysis of the evolution of serious health-related suffering in children aged 0–19 years from 1990 to 2023.” The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health, March 2026. DOI: S2352-4642(25)00338-4
Funding and Disclosures -The study was funded by the University of Miami. Lead author Dr. Felicia Marie Knaul reports research grants from various sources including the University of Cambridge (funder Breast Cancer Now), UK Medical Research Council, and EMD Serono, as well as gift funding from the ABC Global Alliance. She serves as Founding President of Tómatelo a Pecho and as Senior Economist at the Mexican Health Foundation. Other authors report various consulting fees, research grants, and advisory board positions as detailed in the published paper. Complete disclosures are available in the original publication.
END
UCLA report reveals a significant global palliative care gap among children
Findings show 96% of children in need live in low- and middle-income countries
2026-02-11
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
The psychology of self-driving cars: Why the technology doesn’t suit human brains
2026-02-11
Cars with self-driving features are supposed to promise a safer and more convenient future. But there’s a problem: human brains weren’t designed for the strange new role these vehicles demand of us.
According to Professor of Engineering Psychology Ronald McLeod, cars with autonomous features place unprecedented psychological demands on drivers – demands we are currently drastically unprepared for. McLeod is a world-renowned Human Factors specialist, which involves analysing and understanding ...
Scientists discover new DNA-binding proteins from extreme environments that could improve disease diagnosis
2026-02-11
-With images-
Scientists have uncovered new DNA-binding proteins from some of the most extreme environments on Earth and shown that they can improve rapid medical tests for infectious diseases.
The international research team, led by Durham University and working with partners in Iceland, Norway and Poland, analysed genetic material from Icelandic volcanic lakes and deep-sea vents more than two kilometres below the surface of the North Atlantic Ocean.
Nature is the world’s largest source of useful enzymes, ...
Rapid response launched to tackle new yellow rust strains threatening UK wheat
2026-02-11
The UK’s wheat is under threat from a newly identified strain of the yellow rust pathogen, prompting an urgent mobilisation of research institutes to protect harvests. The new strain, identified in 2025, has overcome a key resistance gene that was protecting many major UK wheat varieties from yellow rust infection.
The breakdown of this resistance gene, Yr15, leaves more than 50% of the UK’s wheat acreage vulnerable ...
How many times will we fall passionately in love? New Kinsey Institute study offers first-ever answer
2026-02-10
Falling passionately in love is one of the most talked about human experiences, celebrated in songs, movies, literature and art across cultures. Passionate love is widely considered a hallmark of romantic relationships and has well-documented psychological and behavioral effects. Yet until now, research has overlooked a surprisingly basic question: How many times do people actually experience passionate love over a lifetime?
A new study from researchers at the Kinsey Institute offers the first population-level answer. Published in Interpersona: An International Journal on Personal Relationships, the ...
Bridging eye disease care with addiction services
2026-02-10
Eric Gaier, MD, PhD, and Dean Eliott, MD, of the Department of Ophthalmology at Mass Eye and Ear, a member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, are co-authors of a paper published in Ophthalmology Retina, “Substance Use Disorder Interventions and Ophthalmic Outcomes for Injection Drug Use-Associated Endogenous Endophthalmitis.”
Q: What challenges or unmet needs make this study important?
People who use injection drugs are at a higher risk for eye infections, particularly endogenous endophthalmitis—a medical emergency caused by bacteria or fungi entering the bloodstream to reach the inside of the eye. These individuals may present to eye clinics ...
Study finds declining perception of safety of COVID-19, flu, and MMR vaccines
2026-02-10
In a winter marked by flu outbreaks, the persistence of Covid-19, and surges of measles cases across the United States, an Annenberg survey finds that a sizable majority of Americans think the three vaccines that combat these potentially deadly illnesses are safe to take, although perceptions of the safety of all three vaccines showed a statistically significant drop over the past three years.
Flu levels are rising across the United States, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), with visits to emergency departments increasing for children over five. In 2025, measles cases hit their highest level in the United States since 1991, ...
The genetics of anxiety: Landmark study highlights risk and resilience
2026-02-10
Anxiety disorders — including generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder and phobias — affect as many as one in four people over the course of their lives. They often begin early in life and persist for years, inflicting significant personal, social and economic consequences.
Now, a major breakthrough published in Nature Genetics is offering the clearest picture yet of the genetic roots of these conditions.
In what is now the largest genome‑wide association study (GWAS) of clinically diagnosed anxiety disorders ever conducted, an international ...
How UCLA scientists helped reimagine a forgotten battery design from Thomas Edison
2026-02-10
A little-known fact: In the year 1900, electric cars outnumbered gas-powered ones on the American road.
The lead-acid auto battery of the time, courtesy of Thomas Edison, was expensive and had a range of only about 30 miles. Seeking to improve on this, Edison believed the nickel-iron battery was the future, with the promise of a 100-mile range, a long life and a recharge time of seven hours, fast for that era.
Alas, that promise never reached fruition. Early electric car batteries still suffered from serious limitations, and advances in ...
Dementia Care Aware collaborates with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement to advance age-friendly health systems
2026-02-10
SAN FRANCISCO (Feb. 10, 2026) — Dementia Care Aware (DCA) is collaborating with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (IHI) to support its March 2026 Action Community, a community learning experience that helps health systems across the country implement the 4Ms Framework of an Age-Friendly Health System. DCA is a national organization dedicated to improving dementia detection and care by providing health care teams the education, tools and support necessary to offer high-quality dementia care. This new collaboration advances DCA’s and IHI’s shared goals ...
Growth of spreading pancreatic cancer fueled by 'under-appreciated' epigenetic changes
2026-02-10
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
In a lab-grown cell study focused on potential new treatment targets for halting the spread of most pancreatic cancers, Johns Hopkins Medicine scientists report they have found that a gene called KLF5 (Krueppel-like factor 5) fuels the growth of such spreading tumors not by acquiring abnormal changes in the cancer cells’ DNA code itself but by altering chemical changes and organization of DNA, or epigenetics, that turns genes on and off.
“Epigenetic alterations are underappreciated ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Noise pollution is affecting birds' reproduction, stress levels and more. The good news is we can fix it.
Researchers identify cleaner ways to burn biomass using new environmental impact metric
Avian malaria widespread across Hawaiʻi bird communities, new UH study finds
New study improves accuracy in tracking ammonia pollution sources
Scientists turn agricultural waste into powerful material that removes excess nutrients from water
Tracking whether California’s criminal courts deliver racial justice
Aerobic exercise may be most effective for relieving depression/anxiety symptoms
School restrictive smartphone policies may save a small amount of money by reducing staff costs
UCLA report reveals a significant global palliative care gap among children
The psychology of self-driving cars: Why the technology doesn’t suit human brains
Scientists discover new DNA-binding proteins from extreme environments that could improve disease diagnosis
Rapid response launched to tackle new yellow rust strains threatening UK wheat
How many times will we fall passionately in love? New Kinsey Institute study offers first-ever answer
Bridging eye disease care with addiction services
Study finds declining perception of safety of COVID-19, flu, and MMR vaccines
The genetics of anxiety: Landmark study highlights risk and resilience
How UCLA scientists helped reimagine a forgotten battery design from Thomas Edison
Dementia Care Aware collaborates with the Institute for Healthcare Improvement to advance age-friendly health systems
Growth of spreading pancreatic cancer fueled by 'under-appreciated' epigenetic changes
Lehigh University professor Israel E. Wachs elected to National Academy of Engineering
Brain stimulation can nudge people to behave less selfishly
Shorter treatment regimens are safe options for preventing active tuberculosis
How food shortages reprogram the immune system’s response to infection
The wild physics that keeps your body’s electrical system flowing smoothly
From lab bench to bedside – research in mice leads to answers for undiagnosed human neurodevelopmental conditions
More banks mean higher costs for borrowers
Mohebbi, Manic, & Aslani receive funding for study of scalable AI-driven cybersecurity for small & medium critical manufacturing
Media coverage of Asian American Olympians functioned as 'loyalty test'
University of South Alabama Research named Top 10 Scientific Breakthroughs of 2025
Genotype-specific response to 144-week entecavir therapy for HBeAg-positive chronic hepatitis B with a particular focus on histological improvement
[Press-News.org] UCLA report reveals a significant global palliative care gap among childrenFindings show 96% of children in need live in low- and middle-income countries