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NCT06793631
People living with terminal illness (an illness that is not curable and likely to lead to death) are often unable to work and experience increased costs associated with their health, such as caring costs, needing to purchase aids for daily living (e.g., grab rails) and more travel for appointments. Family members frequently reduce the number of hours they work, or stop working all together, to care for their loved one. These factors exacerbate their risk of financial insecurity. Health and social care professionals are frequently required to complete applications on behalf of patients and their families for these grants or schemes. It is difficult and time-consuming to identify suitable sources of financial support for families living with a terminal illness. There is little known about the families who are applying for this support, how often they need to use these services and why. Mapping these resources and understanding the experiences of those applying for this support will help to identify groups who are at risk of financial insecurity, speed up the application process, and provide understanding to inform future policies to reduce the risk of dying in poverty. In the first phase of this study, the investigators conducted a mapping exercise, across England and Wales, to identify what voluntary and local government sources of support are available for people who are living with a terminal illness to apply for. In the second phase, the investigators want to identify potential barriers and facilitators to accessing this support through qualitative interviews with people who can refer to these sources of funding (e.g., social workers), the services (e.g., grant managers), and people who are living with a terminal illness and have applied for financial support. Overall, this research will scope what financial support services are currently available that people living with terminal illness, and their families, are eligible to apply for across England and Wales, and importantly, what the key barriers and facilitators are to accessing these services.