Family caregiver descriptions of stopping chemotherapy and end-of-life transitions

Article indépendant

NORTON, S. A. | WITTINK, M. N. | DUBERSTEIN, P. R. | PRIGERSON, H. G. | STANEK, S. | EPSTEIN, R. M.

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to describe family caregivers' perspectives of the final month of life of patients with advanced cancer, particularly whether and how chemotherapy was discontinued and the effect of clinical decision-making on family caregivers' perceptions of the patient's experience of care at the end of life (EOL). METHODS: Qualitative descriptive design using semi-structured interviews collected from 92 family caregivers of patients with end-stage cancer enrolled in a randomized clinical trial. We used a phased approach to data analysis including open coding, focused coding, and within and across analyses. RESULTS: We identified three patterns of transitions characterizing the shift away from active cancer treatment: (1) "We Pretty Much Knew," characterized by explicit discussions about EOL care, seemingly shared understanding about prognosis and seamless transitions from disease-oriented treatment to comfort-oriented care, (2) "Beating the Odds," characterized by explicit discussions about disease-directed treatment and EOL care options, but no shared understanding about prognosis and often chaotic transitions to EOL care, and (3) "Left to Die," characterized by no recall of EOL discussions with transitions to EOL occurring in crisis. CONCLUSIONS: As communication and palliative care interventions continue to develop to improve care for patients with advanced cancer, it is imperative that we take into account the different patterns of transition and their unique patient and caregiver needs near the end of life. Our findings reveal considerable, and potentially unwarranted, variation in transitions from active treatment to death.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00520-018-4365-0

Voir la revue «Supportive care in cancer»

Autres numéros de la revue «Supportive care in cancer»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Family caregiver descriptions of stopping che...

Article | NORTON, S. A. | Supportive care in cancer

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to describe family caregivers' perspectives of the final month of life of patients with advanced cancer, particularly whether and how chemotherapy was discontinued and the effect of clinical ...

Family caregiver descriptions of stopping che...

Article indépendant | NORTON, S. A. | Supportive care in cancer

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to describe family caregivers' perspectives of the final month of life of patients with advanced cancer, particularly whether and how chemotherapy was discontinued and the effect of clinical ...

Do we all grieve the same? : a multigroup tes...

Article indépendant | VANG, M. L. | Psychiatry research | vol.318

Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD) is a newly recognized mental disorder in ICD-11 and DSM-5-TR. Several studies using exploratory factor analysis have found a unidimensional structure of the Prolonged Grief-13 (PG-13) measure of PGD....

De la même série

Social factors affecting home-based end-of-li...

Article indépendant | HIRAMOTO, Shuji | Supportive care in cancer | n°1 | vol.33

OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to explore the social factors of patients and caregivers, including those related to their wishes for home-based end-of-life care that influence its fulfillment. METHODS: A secondary analysis was conduc...

Effectiveness of family dignity intervention ...

Article indépendant | YANG, Cuiying | Supportive care in cancer | n°1 | vol.33

OBJECTIVES: This study explores the impact of family dignity interventions (FDI) on palliative patients and their family caregivers through a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials (RCTs). METHODS: A s...

Methodologies and characteristics of studies ...

Article indépendant | CHECHIRLIAN, Kevin | Supportive care in cancer | n°2 | vol.33

PURPOSE: Improvements in the treatment of advanced cancer have increased life expectancy but have also increased the costs to healthcare systems, patients and their families. A systematic review is needed to summarize research wor...

Advanced practice nurse-led early palliative ...

Article indépendant | LELOND, Stephanie | Supportive care in cancer | n°3 | vol.33

BACKGROUND: Although the benefits of early palliative care have been established in advanced cancers, there remains a lack of access to and poor uptake of these services. Barriers include healthcare provider attitudes, lack of sta...

Proactive symptom monitoring to initiate time...

Article indépendant | YANG, Grace Meijuan | Supportive care in cancer | n°3 | vol.33

PURPOSE: To deliver timely palliative care in response to supportive and palliative care needs as they arise, we developed a model called "Supportive and Palliative care Review Kit in Locations Everywhere" (SPARKLE), which compris...

Chargement des enrichissements...