Palliative Care Needs in Advanced Non-Malignant Chronic Conditions: A Qualitative Study of Greek Patients’ and Caregivers’ Perspectives
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Background/Objectives: Palliative care (PC) has traditionally focused on patients with cancer and their families. However, individuals living with advanced non-malignant chronic diseases and their caregivers face comparable challenges that significantly affect their quality of life. This study aimed to explore the PC needs of patients with advanced non-malignant chronic conditions through the lived experiences of both patients and their informal caregivers. Methods: Semi-structured interviews were conducted with eight patients and nine caregivers recruited via the Municipality of Katerini “Help at Home” program (Jan–Mar 2025). Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed verbatim (in Greek), and analysed inductively using thematic analysis. Ethical approval was obtained from the International Hellenic University (Ref. No. 18/22.12.2022), and official consent was gained from the Municipality of Katerini (Approval Ref. No. 7803-/30/01/2025). Results: Five themes emerged: (1) Basic daily care and physical support; (2) Psychosomatic and emotional impact; (3) Social withdrawal and role change; (4) Support systems and sources of resilience; and (5) Experience with the healthcare system and organized care. Participants highlighted urgent needs for home-based physiotherapy/nursing, caregiver respite, and psychological support. Resilience—expressed through family bonds, spirituality, and adaptive coping—also emerged as a cross-cutting dimension influencing how these needs were experienced across all domains. Conclusions: These findings document complex, interlinked needs among patients with advanced non-malignant chronic conditions and their caregivers and support the development of community-based, integrated PC services. Larger, multicenter studies and the development/validation of a needs-assessment tool are recommended.