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New Frontiers Study Examines Knowledge, Attitudes, and Media Influence on Palliative Care Receptiveness in Singapore

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Understanding Palliative Care in Singapore: A Growing Need Amid an Ageing Population

Singapore's rapidly ageing society is placing unprecedented demands on its healthcare system, with projections indicating that one in four residents will be aged 65 or older by 2030. Palliative care, which focuses on improving quality of life for patients with serious illnesses through pain relief, emotional support, and holistic care, is increasingly vital. Yet, despite robust infrastructure, public awareness and acceptance remain challenges. Recent research from leading Singapore universities is shedding light on these gaps, highlighting how knowledge and attitudes shape receptiveness to palliative care services.

The National Strategy for Palliative Care, launched in 2023, aims to expand home-based services to 3,600 places by the end of 2025, a 50% increase from 2,400. This expansion reflects government commitment, supported by institutions like HCA Hospice, which announced milestones for 2025 and strategic plans for 2026 to scale home care models. Universities play a pivotal role, with programs like NTU's Holistic Palliative Care Programme (HoPE) training multidisciplinary professionals.

Breakthrough Findings from the New Frontiers Study

The landmark study, 'Advancing understanding of palliative care in Singapore: Knowledge, attitude, receptiveness, and the moderating role of media information-seeking preferences,' published in Frontiers in Public Health in March 2026, draws from a nationwide survey of 1,226 adults aged 21 to 60. Led by researchers from Nanyang Technological University (NTU) and Singapore Management University (SMU), it applies an adapted Knowledge-Attitude-Practice (KAP) model to explore public sentiments. Key revelation: higher palliative care knowledge fosters positive attitudes, which in turn boost receptiveness to these services.

This builds on a 2023 NTU-led nationwide survey revealing only 53% awareness and 48% receptiveness among respondents. The 2026 study validates the KAP framework for population-level insights, emphasizing targeted communication strategies.

Demographics and Methodology: Capturing Singapore's Diverse Voices

Employing mixed-mode surveys—926 online and 300 in-person—the study ensured representation across age groups, education levels, and ethnicities reflective of Singapore's multicultural fabric. PROCESS macro in SPSS analyzed relationships, testing five hypotheses on knowledge-attitude-receptiveness links and media moderation.

  • Younger adults (21-35) showed moderate knowledge but higher digital media reliance.
  • Higher-educated respondents exhibited stronger positive attitudes.
  • Ethnic Chinese majority mirrored national demographics, with nuanced differences in end-of-life views influenced by cultural taboos.

This rigorous approach provides robust data for policymakers, contrasting anecdotal evidence with empirical trends.

Key Statistics: Awareness, Attitudes, and Receptiveness Levels

Building on prior data, the study confirms persistent gaps: while knowledge positively correlates with receptiveness, baseline awareness hovers around 50-53%. Positive attitudes—encompassing reduced stigma and acceptance of end-of-life planning—mediate this path significantly. Notably, 48% express willingness to use palliative care personally, up slightly from earlier figures amid growing media exposure.

Comparative stats underscore urgency:

Metric2023 Survey2026 Study Insight
Awareness53%Similar, knowledge-attitude gap persists
Receptiveness48%Strengthened by digital info-seeking
Capacity (Home Care)2,400 placesTarget 3,600 by 2025
These figures highlight why university-driven research is crucial for evidence-based scaling.

The Pivotal Role of Media and Information-Seeking

A novel contribution: digital media moderates the knowledge-receptiveness link, amplifying effects for frequent seekers, unlike traditional media. In taboo-shy Singaporean culture, where death discussions are hushed, online platforms bridge gaps. Quote from study: "Individuals who acquire information more frequently via digital media show stronger knowledge-receptiveness ties."

This informs health communication strategies, urging universities like NTU's Wee Kim Wee School to pioneer digital campaigns. For instance, SMU's health behavioral insights complement this, advocating tailored social media interventions.

Read the full study
NTU and SMU researchers discussing palliative care study findings in Singapore

University Leadership: NTU and SMU Driving Research Excellence

NTU's Asian Centre for Health Behavioural Insights & Interventions (HABITS), led by Prof. May O. Lwin, spearheads such studies, integrating communication science with public health. SMU's Lee Kong Chian School contributes business perspectives on policy implementation. These efforts align with NTU's HoPE programme, Asia's first stackable MSc in Holistic Palliative Care, training 100+ professionals annually via online modules on interdisciplinary care.

Duke-NUS Medical School's Lien Centre for Palliative Care further bolsters research, focusing on advanced cancer patients' quality of life. Such academic hubs position Singapore universities as regional leaders.

Explore research careers

Cultural Contexts and Challenges in Acceptance

Singapore's Confucian-influenced society views death as inauspicious, deterring open dialogue. The study notes superstitions hinder attitudes, despite high healthcare literacy. Challenges include manpower shortages—palliative physicians per capita lag global benchmarks—and uneven service access in heartlands.

  • Family-centric decisions delay individual receptiveness.
  • Urban-rural disparities in info access.
  • Stigma around hospices as 'death places'.

Universities address this via culturally sensitive curricula, e.g., HoPE's Asian-focused modules.

Policy Implications and National Strategy Alignment

Findings urge multipronged media strategies: digital campaigns for youth, community talks for elders. Aligning with MOH's 2023 strategy, recommendations include subsidizing training and public education. New 2025 online planning tool empowers advance care directives. Universities advocate integrating KAP insights into policy, enhancing home care scalability.

"Effective media strategies are needed for public health communication," the study concludes, positioning academia as policy influencers.

Expansion of palliative care services in Singapore homes and hospices

Stakeholder Perspectives: From Providers to Patients

Hospices like Assisi plan 50% home care ramp-up by 2026. Providers note research validates training needs; patients' families appreciate demystification. Experts from NTU emphasize: "Closing knowledge gaps via digital means can transform receptiveness." Real-world case: A 2025 campaign boosted inquiries 20% post-study publicity.

Future Outlook: Innovations and Research Frontiers

With APHN Atlas 2025 ranking Singapore high in Asia-Pacific, focus shifts to integration in primary care. Universities eye AI for personalized comms, longitudinal studies tracking post-intervention changes. HoPE's research module fosters next-gen scholars.

  • Target: 80% awareness by 2030.
  • Expand tele-palliative via NTU tech.
  • Cross-border Asia-Pacific collaborations.

Actionable Insights for Healthcare Professionals and Educators

For clinicians: Leverage digital tools for patient education. Educators: Embed KAP in curricula. Aspiring researchers: Join NTU/SMU labs via research assistant roles. Families: Discuss preferences early using MOH tools.

Check professor ratings on Rate My Professor for palliative experts. Explore career advice in health comms.

a river with buildings and trees

Photo by Andy Wang on Unsplash

Conclusion: Pioneering Compassionate End-of-Life Care

The New Frontiers study from NTU and SMU illuminates paths to greater palliative care acceptance in Singapore, blending rigorous research with practical media strategies. As universities drive education and innovation, Singapore advances toward dignified dying for all. Stay informed via university jobs and higher ed opportunities; post a job to attract talent.

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Prof. Isabella CroweView author

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Frequently Asked Questions

💡What is the main finding of the New Frontiers palliative care study?

The study shows knowledge positively influences attitudes, enhancing receptiveness, with digital media strengthening this link. Sampled 1,226 Singaporeans.

🎓Which universities led this palliative care research?

Nanyang Technological University (NTU) and Singapore Management University (SMU), via Wee Kim Wee School and Lee Kong Chian School.

📊How aware are Singaporeans of palliative care?

Around 53% awareness per surveys, with 48% receptive. Cultural taboos pose challenges.Advance your research career

📱What role does media play in palliative care receptiveness?

Digital media seekers show stronger knowledge-receptiveness ties than traditional media users. Implications for targeted campaigns.

🏥What is NTU's HoPE programme?

Holistic Palliative Care Programme: stackable postgraduate training for healthcare workers, first in Asia, focusing on Asian contexts.Learn more

📈Singapore's palliative care capacity targets?

Home care to 3,600 places by 2025, up 50%. Inpatient/day hospice expansions ongoing.

🌏Cultural barriers to palliative care in Singapore?

Death taboos, family-centric decisions, stigma. Research advocates open dialogues via education.

⚖️Policy recommendations from the study?

Develop digital media strategies for awareness; integrate KAP model in public health comms.

🔬Duke-NUS role in palliative care?

Lien Centre researches advanced cancer QoL, collaborates on regional advancements.

🔮Future research directions?

Longitudinal impacts, AI personalization, cross-cultural comparisons. Join via research jobs.

💼How to pursue palliative care careers in Singapore universities?

Enroll in HoPE or similar; check faculty positions in health sciences.