Death anxiety among advanced cancer patients : a cross-sectional survey

Article

HONG, Yang | YUHAN, Lu | YOUHUI, Gu | ZHANYING, Wang | SHILI, Zheng | XIAOTING, Hou | WENHUA, Yu

Purpose: This study aimed to investigate death anxiety in advanced cancer patients and identify associated factors in the context of Chinese culture. Methods: Participants (N = 270) with advanced cancer in a tertiary cancer hospital completed anonymous questionnaire surveys. Measures included the Chinese version of a Likert-type Templer-Death Anxiety Scale, Rosenberg’s Self-esteem Scale, Medical Coping Modes Questionnaire, the Social Support Rating Scale, and Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale. Data were analyzed in SPSS using descriptive statistics, Student’s t test, Pearson correlation test, and linear regression. Results: Respondents returned 252 (93.33%) of the 270 questionnaires. The total CL-TDAS score was 39.56 ± 10.20. The top three items were “I fear dying a painful death” (3.59 ± 1.41), “I often think about how shortly life really is” (3.11 ± 1.33), and “1 am not particularly afraid of getting cancer” (3.09 ± 1.35). Associated factors of death anxiety (R2 = .333, F = 15.756, p < .001) were the medical coping mode (resignation, confronce), self-esteem, the participants’ adult children, the patient-primary caregivers’ relationship, resilience, and the level of activity of daily living. Conclusions: Our results demonstrate high levels of death anxiety in advanced cancer patients. Generally, patients with adult children, high self-esteem and resilience had low death anxiety. Conversely, patients with low levels of activity of daily living and high coping mode (resignation, confrontation) reported high death anxiety. We determined that associated factors contributed to reduce death anxiety. Social interventions are recommended to improve the end-of-life transition for patients and caregivers.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00520-022-06795-z

Voir la revue «Supportive care in cancer»

Autres numéros de la revue «Supportive care in cancer»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Death anxiety among advanced cancer patients ...

Article indépendant | HONG, Yang | Supportive care in cancer

Purpose: This study aimed to investigate death anxiety in advanced cancer patients and identify associated factors in the context of Chinese culture. Methods: Participants (N = 270) with advanced cancer in a tertiary cancer hospit...

Death anxiety among advanced cancer patients ...

Article indépendant | HONG, Yang | Supportive care in cancer

Purpose: This study aimed to investigate death anxiety in advanced cancer patients and identify associated factors in the context of Chinese culture. Methods: Participants (N = 270) with advanced cancer in a tertiary cancer hospit...

Advance directives and end-of-life care : kno...

Article | WANG, Yixin | BMC Cancer | n°1 | vol.21

BACKGROUND: In Mainland China, advance directives (ADs) and end-of-life care for patients with tumours, especially patients with brain tumours who may have lost consciousness or the ability to speak at the early stage of their ill...

De la même série

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

Article | 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 | 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 | 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 | 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 | 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...