What would it take to die well? a systematic review of systematic reviews on the conditions for a good death

Article indépendant

ZAMAN, Mehreen | ESPINAL-ARANGO, Sara | MOHAPATRA, Ashita | JADAD, Alejandro R.

The medicalisation of life under the influence of health-care systems, focused on curing diseases, has made dying well challenging. This systematic review identifies common themes from published systematic reviews about the conditions for a good death as a means to guide decisions around this universal event. MEDLINE, Embase, APA PsycInfo, and AMED were searched for citations with "good death" or "dying well" in their titles on Sept 23, 2020, and complemented with backward reference and forward citation screening with Google Scholar. Articles published in peer-reviewed journals in any language were included. Articles that focused on the identification of conditions for a good death and described how primary studies were sought and selected were also included. Data on general characteristics, quality, and themes were extracted independently. 13 of 275 potentially eligible reviews were included. Common themes were dying at the preferred place, relief from pain and psychological distress, emotional support from loved ones, autonomous treatment decision making, avoidance of futile life-prolonging interventions and of being a burden to others, right to assisted suicide or euthanasia, effective communication with professionals, and performance of rituals. No reviews specified the meaning or timing of death, connected themes, or prioritised them. Vague jargon was often used to describe complex concepts. Most conditions for a good death could be offered to most dying people, without costly medical infrastructure or specialised knowledge. Efforts to describe these conditions clearly, to identify whether there are exceptions or missing items, and whether they apply in non-dominant settings (ie, outstide institutional, affluent, anglophone, and Christian settings) are needed.



https://www.thelancet.com/journals/lanhl/article/PIIS2666-7568(21)00097-0/abstract

Voir la revue «The Lancet Healthy Longevity, 2»

Autres numéros de la revue «The Lancet Healthy Longevity»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

What would it take to die well? a systematic ...

Article | ZAMAN, Mehreen | The Lancet Healthy Longevity | n°9 | vol.2

The medicalisation of life under the influence of health-care systems, focused on curing diseases, has made dying well challenging. This systematic review identifies common themes from published systematic reviews about the condit...

What would it take to die well? a systematic ...

Article indépendant | ZAMAN, Mehreen | The Lancet Healthy Longevity | n°9 | vol.2

The medicalisation of life under the influence of health-care systems, focused on curing diseases, has made dying well challenging. This systematic review identifies common themes from published systematic reviews about the condit...

A good death : non-negotiable personal condit...

Article | ZAMAN, Mehreen | BMJ supportive & palliative care | n°4 | vol.13

OBJECTIVES: To ask all clinical, administrative and support staff affiliated with a large network of healthcare facilities to identify the conditions that they consider as non-negotiable for their own deaths to be regarded as good...

De la même série

Receipt of specialized palliative care and he...

Article | VON BAHR, Lena | Acta oncologica | vol.64

BACKGROUND: The treatments of hematological malignancies tend to be intense, and compared with solid tumors, less is known about the health care consumption during end of life (EOL). Therefore, the aim was to study the receipt of ...

Implementation of early palliative care in an...

Article | GILL, Sabine Ute Alice | Acta oncologica | n°5 | vol.62

BACKGROUND: As earlier studies found that early onset specialized palliative care (ESPC) results in better quality of life (QoL), less hospitalization and chemotherapy toward end-of life, we implemented ESPC in our oncology outpat...

Association between clinical frailty scale sc...

Article indépendant | SABLEROLLES, Roos S. G. | The Lancet Healthy Longevity | n°2 | vol.2

Background: During the COVID-19 pandemic, the scarcity of resources has necessitated triage of critical care for patients with the disease. In patients aged 65 years and older, triage decisions are regularly based on degree of fra...

What would it take to die well? a systematic ...

Article indépendant | ZAMAN, Mehreen | The Lancet Healthy Longevity | n°9 | vol.2

The medicalisation of life under the influence of health-care systems, focused on curing diseases, has made dying well challenging. This systematic review identifies common themes from published systematic reviews about the condit...

Palliative care of patients with haematologic...

Article indépendant | WEDDING, Ulrich | The Lancet Healthy Longevity | n°11 | vol.2

Palliative care, hospice care, and end of life care have been the focus of increased attention over the past two decades; palliative care has shifted from being introduced only at the end of life to becoming an integrated part of ...

Chargement des enrichissements...