Changing preferences for information and participation in the last phase of life: a longitudinal study among newly diagnosed advanced lung cancer patients.

Autor: Pardon, Koen, Deschepper, R., Vander Stichele, R., Bernheim, J., Mortier, F., Bossuyt, N., Schallier, D., Germonpré, P., Galdermans, D., Kerckhoven, W., Deliens, L.
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Zdroj: Supportive Care in Cancer; Oct2012, Vol. 20 Issue 10, p2473-2482, 10p
Abstrakt: Purpose: The objective is to explore changes over time in the information and participation preferences of newly diagnosed stage IIIb/IV non-small-cell lung cancer patients. Methods: Patients were recruited by physicians in 13 hospitals and interviewed every 2 months until the fourth and every 4 months until the sixth interview. Results: Sixty-seven patients were interviewed three times. Over a period of 4 months from diagnosis, half of patients changed their information preferences for palliative care and end-of-life decisions with a possible or certain life-shortening effect (ELDs, e.g., non-treatment decisions) in both directions, from not wanting to wanting the information, but also-and as much-from wanting to no longer wanting it. The latter were more likely to be in a better physical condition. Preferences for participation in medical decision making also changed: 50% to 78%, depending on the type of decision (general, treatment, transfer or ELD), changed their preference towards wanting more or less participation. Pain seemed to be a trigger for patients wanting more involvement, which contrasts with studies suggesting that patients who are more ill tend to give up more control. Conclusions: Doctors should regularly ask their advanced lung cancer patients how much information and participation they want because preferences do change in unexpected ways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
Databáze: Complementary Index