1. Priorities of a "good death" according to cancer patients, their family caregivers, physicians, and the general population: a nationwide survey.
- Author
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Yun YH, Kim KN, Sim JA, Kang E, Lee J, Choo J, Yoo SH, Kim M, Kim YA, Kang BD, Shim HJ, Song EK, Kang JH, Kwon JH, Lee JL, Lee SN, Maeng CH, Kang EJ, Do YR, Choi YS, and Jung KH
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Death, Female, Humans, Male, Middle Aged, Pain, Physicians psychology, Physicians statistics & numerical data, Public Opinion, Republic of Korea epidemiology, Surveys and Questionnaires, Terminal Care psychology, Terminal Care statistics & numerical data, Young Adult, Attitude to Death, Caregivers psychology, Caregivers statistics & numerical data, Family psychology, Health Personnel psychology, Health Personnel statistics & numerical data, Neoplasms epidemiology, Neoplasms psychology, Terminal Care standards
- Abstract
Purpose: Understanding the concept of a "good death" is crucial to end-of-life care, but our current understanding of what constitutes a good death is insufficient. Here, we investigated the components of a good death that are important to the general population, cancer patients, their families, and physicians., Methods: We conducted a stratified nationwide cross-sectional survey of cancer patients and their families from 12 hospitals, physicians from 12 hospitals and the Korean Medical Association, and the general population, investigating their attitudes toward 10 good-death components., Findings: Three components-"not be a burden to the family," "presence of family," and "resolve unfinished business"-were considered the most important components by more than 2/3 of each of the three groups, and an additional three components-"freedom from pain," "feel that life was meaningful," and "at peace with God"-were considered important by all but the physicians group. Physicians considered "feel life was meaningful," "presence of family," and "not be a burden to family" as the core components of a good death, with "freedom from pain" as an additional component. "Treatment choices' followed, "finances in order," "mentally aware," and "die at home" were found to be the least important components among all four groups., Conclusion: While families strongly agreed that "presence of family" and "not be a burden to family" were important to a good death, the importance of other factors differed between the groups. Health care providers should attempt to discern each patient's view of a good death.
- Published
- 2018
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