Coming to terms with dying: Advance care planning as a conduit between clinicians, patients, and conversations about death and dying - a qualitative interview study

被引:0
作者
Eason, Rowena Jane [1 ]
Brighton, Lisa Jane [1 ]
Koffman, Jonathan [2 ]
Bristowe, Katherine [1 ]
机构
[1] Kings Coll London, Cicely Saunders Inst Palliat Care Policy & Rehabi, Bessemer Rd, London SE5 9PJ, England
[2] Hull York Med Sch, Wolfson Palliat Care Res Ctr, Kingston Upon Hull, N Humberside, England
关键词
Advance care planning; decision making; thinking; emotions; behaviour; qualitative research; OF-LIFE CARE; PALLIATIVE CARE; PEOPLE; CANCER; PERSPECTIVES; EXPERIENCES; PREFERENCES; DIRECTIVES;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Background: Advance care planning discussions exploring future care and support needs can be beneficial to people with advanced illness. While research has focussed on barriers, outcomes, and completion, little is known about how discussions influence thoughts, feelings, and behaviours. Aim: To explore experiences of advance care planning for people with incurable life-limiting illnesses, to understand the impact of discussions on individuals, and factors influencing psychological responses. Design: Semi-structured qualitative interviews were conducted. Data were analysed using framework analysis. Reflexive journalling and discussion of coding framework and themes supported rigour. Setting/participants: Twenty purposively sampled adults receiving hospice care, aged 30-93 with cancer (n=15) and non-cancer (n=5) diagnoses were interviewed. Results: Advance care planning elicits multiple complex thoughts, emotions, and behaviours, with responses ranging from the procedural to the profound. Discussions empowered and instilled confidence, promoted openness with relatives, encouraged people to make the most of their time remaining, and sometimes contributed to coming to terms with their mortality. Factors influencing experiences of discussions reflected the complexity and diversity in participants' lives, personalities, and life experiences, with discussions exposing the realities of living with terminal illness. Conclusion: Individuals' unique lives and experiences shape their responses to, and the impact of advance care planning on how they think, feel and behave. Advance care planning is not simply a means to document end-of-life care preferences, but can empower and instil confidence in patients, and may form part of the process of coming to terms with mortality, allowing clinicians to shift focus from process-related outcomes.
引用
收藏
页码:425 / 436
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] How should we talk about palliative care, death and dying? A qualitative study exploring perspectives from caregivers of people with advanced cancer
    Collins, Anna
    McLachlan, Sue-Anne
    Philip, Jennifer
    PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2018, 32 (04) : 861 - 869
  • [32] Advance Care Planning for Intensive Care Patients During the Perioperative Period: A Qualitative Study
    Yamamoto, Kanako
    Yonekura, Yuki
    Hayama, Junko
    Matsubara, Taketo
    Misumi, Hiroyasu
    Nakayama, Kazuhiro
    SAGE OPEN NURSING, 2021, 7
  • [33] To speak, or not to speak - do clinicians speak about dying and death with geriatric patients at the end of life?
    Lenherr, Gabriel
    Meyer-Zehnder, Barbara
    Kressig, Reto W.
    Reiter-Theil, Stella
    SWISS MEDICAL WEEKLY, 2012, 142
  • [34] Advance care planning and quality of life: A qualitative interview study in people with young-onset dementia and their family caregivers
    Maters, Jasper
    Perry, Marieke
    de Wit, Ton
    Koopmans, Raymond T. C. M.
    de Vugt, Marjolein E.
    Bakker, Christian
    van der Steen, Jenny T.
    PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2025, : 563 - 573
  • [35] An easier way to die?-A qualitative interview study on specialist palliative care team members' views on dying under sedation
    Bazata, Jeremias
    Meesters, Sophie
    Bozzaro, Claudia
    Handtke, Violet
    Schildmann, Jan
    Heckel, Maria
    Ostgathe, Christoph
    Bausewein, Claudia
    Schildmann, Eva
    SedPall Study Grp
    PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, 2025, 39 (04) : 517 - 526
  • [36] Advance Care Planning: A Qualitative Study of Dialysis Patients and Families
    Goff, Sarah L.
    Eneanya, Nwamaka D.
    Feinberg, Rebecca
    Germain, Michael J.
    Marr, Lisa
    Berzoff, Joan
    Cohen, Lewis M.
    Unruh, Mark
    CLINICAL JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF NEPHROLOGY, 2015, 10 (03): : 390 - 400
  • [37] 'Beyond the Reach of Palliative Care': A Qualitative Study of Patient and Public Experiences and Anticipation of Death and Dying
    Pollock, Kristian
    Caswell, Glenys
    Turner, Nicola
    Wilson, Eleanor
    QUALITATIVE HEALTH RESEARCH, 2024, 34 (14) : 1428 - 1441
  • [38] Advance care planning for patients with cancer and family caregivers in Indonesia: a qualitative study
    Martina, Diah
    Kustanti, Christina Yeni
    Dewantari, Rahajeng
    Sutandyo, Noorwati
    Putranto, Rudi
    Shatri, Hamzah
    Effendy, Christantie
    van der Heide, Agnes
    van der Rijt, Carin C. D.
    Rietjens, Judith A. C.
    BMC PALLIATIVE CARE, 2022, 21 (01)
  • [39] Clinical nurse specialists' perspectives on advance care planning conversations: a qualitative study
    Boot, Michelle
    Wilson, Catherine
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE NURSING, 2014, 20 (01) : 9 - 14
  • [40] Exploring clinicians? decision-making processes about end-of-life care after burns: A qualitative interview study
    Reeder, Sandra
    Cleland, Heather J.
    Gold, Michelle
    Tracy, Lincoln M.
    BURNS, 2023, 49 (03) : 595 - 606