Verbal communication of families with cancer patients at end of life : a questionnaire survey with bereaved family members

Article

NAKAZATO, Kazuhiro | SHIOZAKI, Mariko | HIRAI, Kei | MORITA, Tatsuya | TATARA, Ryuhei | ICHIHARA, Kaori | SATO, Shinichi | SIMIZU, Megumi | TUNETO, Satoru | SHIMA, Yasuo | MIYASITA, Mitsunori

OBJECTIVE: To clarify the verbal communication of feelings between families and patients in Japanese palliative care units (PCUs) from the perspective of bereaved family members by examining (1) proportions of families' and patients' verbalization of six feelings (gratitude, love, seeking forgiveness, giving forgiveness, wishes after death, and continuing bonds),(2) recognition of receiving these feelings through verbalization from the family's perspective, and (3) the specific attitudes of family members that influence their verbalizations. METHODS: In 2010, a cross-sectional survey was conducted with 968 bereaved families of cancer patients in PCUs across Japan. RESULTS: Five hundred thirty-seven responses were analyzed. (1) "Gratitude" was verbalized most often (families: 47%; patients: 61%) and "expressing forgiveness" least often (families: 16%; patients: 11%). (2) Even if the words were not used, 81.2-88.2% of families answered that they had received the patient's feelings, and 71.8-85.4% of families felt the patient had received their feelings. (3) Multiple logistic regression analyses indicated that the strongest attitudes determining verbalizing were "not wanting to say farewell without conveying feelings," "a daily basis of expressing," and "heart-to-heart communication" (Ishin-Denshin). CONCLUSIONS: For both families and patients, verbalizing feelings was difficult. Our results showed that families' and patients' verbalizing and receiving of feelings must be aligned to understand their communication at the end-of-life in Japan. Future research is needed to verify how attitude helps promote or inhibit verbalization.

https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/epdf/10.1002/pon.4482

Voir la revue «Psycho-oncology, 27»

Autres numéros de la revue «Psycho-oncology»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Verbal communication of families with cancer ...

Article indépendant | NAKAZATO, Kazuhiro | Psycho-oncology | n°1 | vol.27

OBJECTIVE: To clarify the verbal communication of feelings between families and patients in Japanese palliative care units (PCUs) from the perspective of bereaved family members by examining (1) proportions of families' and patien...

Verbal communication of families with cancer ...

Article indépendant | NAKAZATO, Kazuhiro | Psycho-oncology | n°1 | vol.27

OBJECTIVE: To clarify the verbal communication of feelings between families and patients in Japanese palliative care units (PCUs) from the perspective of bereaved family members by examining (1) proportions of families' and patien...

Talking about death with terminally-ill cance...

Article | MORI, Masanori | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT | n°6 | vol.54

CONTEXT: Talking about death is an important issue for terminally-ill cancer patients and their families. Little is known about how often and which bereaved families regret not having talked about death with their deceased loved o...

De la même série

Psychosocial correlates of death anxiety in a...

Article | BROWN, Tyler L. | Psycho-oncology | n°1 | vol.34

OBJECTIVES: Individuals living with advanced cancer commonly experience death anxiety, which refers to the distressing thoughts or feelings associated with awareness of one's mortality. Deriving an overview of existing literature ...

Death preparedness scale for advanced cancer ...

Article | ZHANG, Xi | Psycho-oncology | n°4 | vol.34

PURPOSE: Death preparedness plays a crucial role in improving the quality of death for advanced cancer patients. However, existing tools only assess certain aspects of death preparedness in advanced cancer patients, and there is l...

Caregiving burden and psychological vulnerabi...

Article | NAKAZAWA, Yoko | Psycho-oncology | n°4 | vol.34

OBJECTIVE: With the aging population, family caregivers, including young adults, play an increasingly important role in supporting patients with cancer. This study compares the caregiving burden and psychological vulnerability fac...

Sexual satisfaction and its predictors in pat...

Article | MATTHYS, Orphé | Psycho-oncology | n°6 | vol.33

OBJECTIVE: To identify predictors of sexual satisfaction in patients with advanced cancer and their family caregivers. METHODS: Cross-sectional study using baseline survey data from a randomized controlled trial in six European co...

Mixed-methods evaluation of a face-to-face ed...

Article | HANNA, Jeffrey R. | Psycho-oncology | n°7 | vol.33

OBJECTIVE: To deliver and evaluate an educational intervention to equip health and social care professionals (professionals) on how best to support parents at end of life with cancer concerning their dependent children (<18). METH...

Chargement des enrichissements...