Back to Search Start Over

Preferences for place of death if faced with advanced cancer: a population survey in England, Flanders, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal and Spain

Authors :
Silvia Finetti
Bárbara Antunes
Marjolein Gysels
Sue Hall
Julia Downing
Luc Deliens
Jonathan Koffman
Lucas Ceulemans
Joachim Cohen
Arantza Meñaca
Francesca Pettenati
Richard Harding
Natalia Calanzani
Barbara A Daveson
Gwenda Albers
Dagny Faksvåg Haugen
Claudia Bausewein
H. R. W. Pasman
Pedro Lopes Ferreira
Steffen T. Simon
Irene J Higginson
Dorothee Bechinger-English
Fliss E M Murtagh
Franco Toscani
Barbara Gomes
Public and occupational health
EMGO - Quality of care
PRISMA
Source :
Annals of Oncology, 23(8), 2006-2015. Oxford University Press, Annals of Oncology; Vol 23, Annals of oncology, Gomes, B, Higginson, I J, Calanzani, N, Cohen, J, Deliens, L, Daveson, B A, Bechinger-English, D, Bausewein, C, Ferreira, P L, Toscani, F, Menaca, A, Gysels, M, Ceulemans, L, Simon, S T, Pasman, H R W, Albers, G, Hall, S, Murtagh, F E M, Haugen, D F, Downing, J, Koffman, J, Pettenati, F, Finetti, S, Antunes, B & On, R H 2012, ' Preferences for place of death if faced with advanced cancer: a population survey in England, Flanders, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal and Spain ', Annals of Oncology, vol. 23, no. 8, pp. 2006-2015 . https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdr602
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Cancer end-of-life care (EoLC) policies assume people want to die at home. We aimed to examine variations in preferences for place of death cross-nationally. A telephone survey of a random sample of individuals aged >= 16 in England, Flanders, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Portugal and Spain. We determined where people would prefer to die if they had a serious illness such as advanced cancer, facilitating circumstances, personal values and experiences of illness, death and dying. Of 9344 participants, between 51% (95% CI: 48% to 54%) in Portugal and 84% (95% CI: 82% to 86%) in the Netherlands would prefer to die at home. Cross-national analysis found there to be an influence of circumstances and values but not of experiences of illness, death and dying. Four factors were associated with a preference for home death in more than one country: younger age up to 70+ (Germany, the Netherlands, Portugal, Spain), increased importance of dying in the preferred place (England, Germany, Portugal, Spain), prioritizing keeping a positive attitude (Germany, Spain) and wanting to involve family in decisions if incapable (Flanders, Portugal). At least two-thirds of people prefer a home death in all but one country studied. The strong association with personal values suggests keeping home care at the heart of cancer EoLC.

Details

ISSN :
09237534
Volume :
23
Issue :
8
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5f394e12807be5d7e20b7781ce9227e8
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdr602