Making sense of continuous sedation in end-of-life care for cancer patients: an interview study with bereaved relatives in three European countries
Autor: | Sheila Payne, Livia Anquinet, Luc Deliens, Judith Anna Cathari Rietjens, Jane Seymour, Jayne Brown, A. van der Heide, Sophie Bruinsma |
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Přispěvatelé: | Public and occupational health, EMGO - Quality of care, End-of-life Care Research Group, Public Health |
Rok vydání: | 2014 |
Předmět: |
Male
european Palliative care Conscious Sedation continuous Making Belgium Terminal Sedation Neoplasms Qualitative Research Cancer Netherlands Aged 80 and over Terminal Care Nursing research Palliative Care Middle Aged bereaved Countries tree sedation Oncology sense Female medicine.symptom End-of-life care Adult Cross-Cultural Comparison medicine.medical_specialty Patients Sedation Pain medicine Decision Making end-of-life SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being medicine Humans study Family care Interview Intensive care medicine Aged business.industry Cross-cultural studies Relatives United Kingdom beareac Ethnopsychology Family medicine business Bereavement Qualitative research |
Zdroj: | Bruinsma, S M, Brown, J, Heide, A, Deliens, L, Anquinet, L, Payne, S A, Seymour, J E & Rietjens, J A C 2014, ' Making sense of continuous sedation in end-of-life care for cancer patients: an interview study with bereaved relatives in three European countries ', Supportive Care in Cancer, vol. 22, no. 12, pp. 3243-3252 . https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-014-2344-7 Supportive Care in Cancer, 22(12), 3243-3252. Springer Verlag Supportive Care in Cancer, 22(12), 3243-3252. Springer-Verlag |
ISSN: | 1433-7339 0941-4355 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00520-014-2344-7 |
Popis: | PURPOSE: The purpose of the study was to explore relatives' descriptions and experiences of continuous sedation in end-of-life care for cancer patients and to identify and explain differences between respondents from the Netherlands, Belgium, and the UK. METHODS: In-depth interviews were held between January 2011 and May 2012 with 38 relatives of 32 cancer patients who received continuous sedation until death in hospitals, the community, and hospices/palliative care units. RESULTS: Relatives' descriptions of the practice referred to the outcome, to practical aspects, and to the goals of sedation. While most relatives believed sedation had contributed to a 'good death' for the patient, yet many expressed concerns. These related to anxieties about the patient's wellbeing, their own wellbeing, and questions about whether continuous sedation had shortened the patient's life (mostly UK), or whether an alternative approach would have been better. Such concerns seemed to have been prompted by relatives witnessing unexpected events such as the patient coming to awareness during sedation. In the Netherlands and in Belgium, several relatives reported that the start of the sedation allowed for a planned moment of 'saying goodbye'. In contrast, UK relatives discerned neither an explicit point at which sedation was started nor a specific moment of farewell. CONCLUSIONS: Relatives believed that sedation contributed to the patient having a good death. Nevertheless, they also expressed concerns that may have been provoked by unexpected events for which they were unprepared. There seems to exist differences in the process of saying goodbye between the NL/BE and the UK. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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