Health professionals' understanding and attitude towards the End of Life Choice Act 2019 : a secondary analysis of Manatu Hauora - Ministry of Health Workforce surveys

Article indépendant

DEHKHODA, Aida | FREY, Rosemary | CAREY, Melissa | JING, Xuepeng | BULL, Susan | SUNDRAM, Frederick | HOEH, Nicholas R. | MENKES, David | ROBINSON, Jacqualine | CHEUNG, Gary

Aim: To determine socio-demographic factors associated with health professionals' understanding of the End of Life Choice Act (the Act), support for assisted dying (AD), and willingness to provide AD in New Zealand. Method: Secondary analysis of two Manatu Hauora - Ministry of Health workforce surveys conducted in February and July 2021. Results: Our analysis showed (1) older health professionals (age>55) had a better overall understanding of the Act than their young colleagues (age 35), (2) female health professionals were less likely to support and be willing to provide AD, (3) Asian health professionals were less likely to support AD compared to their Pakeha/European counterparts, (4) nurses were more likely to support AD and be willing to provide AD when compared to medical practitioners, and (5) pharmacists were more willing to provide AD when compared to medical practitioners. Conclusion: Several socio-demographic factors, including age, gender, ethnicity, and professional background, are significantly associated with health professionals' support and willingness to provide AD, with likely consequences for the AD workforce availability and service delivery in New Zealand. Future review of the Act could consider enhancing the roles of those professional groups with higher support and willingness to assist in providing AD services in caring for people requesting AD.

Voir la revue «The New Zealand medical journal, 136»

Autres numéros de la revue «The New Zealand medical journal»

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Health professionals' understanding and attit...

Article indépendant | DEHKHODA, Aida | The New Zealand medical journal | n°1576 | vol.136

Aim: To determine socio-demographic factors associated with health professionals' understanding of the End of Life Choice Act (the Act), support for assisted dying (AD), and willingness to provide AD in New Zealand. Method: Second...

Early experiences of the End of Life Choice A...

Article indépendant | DEHKHODA, Aida | BMC palliative care | n°1 | vol.24

BACKGROUND: The global trend of legalising assisted dying (AD) has reshaped end-of-life care practices, and Aotearoa New Zealand's adoption of the End of Life Choice Act (the Act) in 2019 represents a significant shift. Limited em...

What do health care professionals want to kno...

Article | YOUNG, Jessica | BMC palliative care | n°1 | vol.22

BACKGROUND: New Zealand recently introduced law permitting terminally ill people to request and receive assisted dying (AD) in specified circumstances. Given the nature and complexity of this new health service, research is vital ...

De la même série

How is the specialist-primary palliative care...

Article indépendant | YOUNG, Jessica | The New Zealand medical journal | n°1608 | vol.138

AIM: Patient barriers to accessing hospice and palliative care (PC) have been well studied. Important, yet less investigated, is how cancer patients whose hospice referrals were not accepted are being cared for. This article aims ...

Dying well in Aotearoa New Zealand for ethnic...

Article indépendant | SHAH, Shamsul | The New Zealand medical journal | n°1598 | vol.137

Despite technological advances and a disproportionate increase in health expenditure at the end-of-life, most New Zealanders die in hospital or in aged residential care. This counters the aspirations espoused by Te Whatu Ora (Heal...

Paediatric palliative care in Aotearoa New Ze...

Article indépendant | ABURN, Gemma E. | The New Zealand medical journal | n°1605 | vol.137

This paper seeks to explore the current state of paediatric palliative care in Aotearoa New Zealand. The low priority afforded to paediatric palliative care for more than two decades has had a significant impact on service provisi...

Health professionals' understanding and attit...

Article indépendant | DEHKHODA, Aida | The New Zealand medical journal | n°1576 | vol.136

Aim: To determine socio-demographic factors associated with health professionals' understanding of the End of Life Choice Act (the Act), support for assisted dying (AD), and willingness to provide AD in New Zealand. Method: Second...

Aotearoa New Zealand emergency ambulance serv...

Article indépendant | MUNRO, Andrew | The New Zealand medical journal | n°1574 | vol.136

AIM: To characterise emergency ambulance service (EAS) clinical roles and experiences (including cultural competency and pastoral care) in the delivery of end-of-life (EOL) and palliative care in Aotearoa New Zealand. METHOD: A ni...

Chargement des enrichissements...