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The double awareness of the wish to hasten death and the will to live: A secondary analysis of outlier patients from a mixed-methods study
Manage episode 449909294 series 1316808
This episode features Professor Raymond Voltz (Department of Palliative Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany; Center for Integrated Oncology Aachen Bonn Cologne Duesseldorf (CIO ABCD), Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany; Center for Health Services Research, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany)
What is already known about the topic?
- The wish to hasten death is frequent in patients with serious illness and can associated with immense burden, potentially leading to suicidality or a wish for assisted suicide.
- Many patients retain their will to live throughout their entire illness trajectory, even in palliative stages and at the end of life.
- In some studies, both phenomena are found to be negatively correlated, yet simultaneous expressions of both a high wish to hasten death and a high will to live are possible.
What this paper adds?
- We confirm the negative correlation between the wish to hasten death and the will to live over the observation time of 4–6 week after an open conversation in the group analysis.
- However, there was a substantial number of outliers of this pattern with clinically relevant changes in both phenomen.
- Three illustrative cases show that factors like patient personality and individual situation influence uncommon trajectories of wish to hasten death and will to live.
Implications for practice, theory, or policy
- Clinical and research assessment should be aware of the fact that a wish to hasten death does not necessarily imply a low will to live and vice versa, thus both phenomena should be addressed simultaneously and proactively.
- The application of secondary analysis using an integrative mixed-methods-approach of validated questionnaires and in-depth interviews might be effective to reveal the nature of ambiguous or seemingly paradoxical phenomena such as double awareness of wish to hasten death and will to live.
- As the double awareness of the wish to hasten death and the will to live is common at the end of life, but can be hard to endure, health professionals should develop an open and accepting attitude to support patients in dealing with it.
Full paper available from:
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/02692163241269689
If you would like to record a podcast about your published (or accepted) Palliative Medicine paper, please contact Dr Amara Nwosu:
115 episodes
Manage episode 449909294 series 1316808
This episode features Professor Raymond Voltz (Department of Palliative Medicine, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany; Center for Integrated Oncology Aachen Bonn Cologne Duesseldorf (CIO ABCD), Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany; Center for Health Services Research, Faculty of Medicine and University Hospital, University of Cologne, Cologne, Germany)
What is already known about the topic?
- The wish to hasten death is frequent in patients with serious illness and can associated with immense burden, potentially leading to suicidality or a wish for assisted suicide.
- Many patients retain their will to live throughout their entire illness trajectory, even in palliative stages and at the end of life.
- In some studies, both phenomena are found to be negatively correlated, yet simultaneous expressions of both a high wish to hasten death and a high will to live are possible.
What this paper adds?
- We confirm the negative correlation between the wish to hasten death and the will to live over the observation time of 4–6 week after an open conversation in the group analysis.
- However, there was a substantial number of outliers of this pattern with clinically relevant changes in both phenomen.
- Three illustrative cases show that factors like patient personality and individual situation influence uncommon trajectories of wish to hasten death and will to live.
Implications for practice, theory, or policy
- Clinical and research assessment should be aware of the fact that a wish to hasten death does not necessarily imply a low will to live and vice versa, thus both phenomena should be addressed simultaneously and proactively.
- The application of secondary analysis using an integrative mixed-methods-approach of validated questionnaires and in-depth interviews might be effective to reveal the nature of ambiguous or seemingly paradoxical phenomena such as double awareness of wish to hasten death and will to live.
- As the double awareness of the wish to hasten death and the will to live is common at the end of life, but can be hard to endure, health professionals should develop an open and accepting attitude to support patients in dealing with it.
Full paper available from:
https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.1177/02692163241269689
If you would like to record a podcast about your published (or accepted) Palliative Medicine paper, please contact Dr Amara Nwosu:
115 episodes
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