TY - JOUR
T1 - Family member perspectives of deceased relatives' end-of-life options on admission to a palliative care unit in Japan
AU - Sato, Kazuki
AU - Miyashita, Mitsunori
AU - Morita, Tatsuya
AU - Tsuneto, Satoru
AU - Shima, Yasuo
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgement This study was supported by a from the Japan Hospice Palliative Care Foundation.
PY - 2012/5
Y1 - 2012/5
N2 - Purpose Our goal was to better facilitate the desire of terminally ill patients to die in a favorite place, which may not always be the case for patients admitted to palliative care units. Our aims were to assess the perspectives of bereaved family members about (1) available and preferred places of care when their ill loved one was admitted to a palliative care unit and (2) why patients preferred to live at home but could not. Methods A questionnaire was answered by 407 of 663 bereaved family members of cancer patients who were admitted to 95 inpatient palliative care units in Japan. Results Seventy-three percent of respondents answered that a palliative care unit was the only available option. Patients lacking other places for care preferred their home (49%), a hospital (26%), or a long-term care facility (28%). Only 9% retrospectively considered that living at home was feasible for the following reasons: anxiety about the patient's deteriorating physical condition (85%), insufficient care at home compared to a hospital (84%), imminent hospitalization (63%), and the patient's concern about being burdensome (60%). Conclusion Seventy-three percent of terminally ill cancer patients admitted to palliative care units had no other options for care. Improving outpatient treatment at palliative care units and establishing a palliative care system in patients' homes would greatly benefit patients and their families.
AB - Purpose Our goal was to better facilitate the desire of terminally ill patients to die in a favorite place, which may not always be the case for patients admitted to palliative care units. Our aims were to assess the perspectives of bereaved family members about (1) available and preferred places of care when their ill loved one was admitted to a palliative care unit and (2) why patients preferred to live at home but could not. Methods A questionnaire was answered by 407 of 663 bereaved family members of cancer patients who were admitted to 95 inpatient palliative care units in Japan. Results Seventy-three percent of respondents answered that a palliative care unit was the only available option. Patients lacking other places for care preferred their home (49%), a hospital (26%), or a long-term care facility (28%). Only 9% retrospectively considered that living at home was feasible for the following reasons: anxiety about the patient's deteriorating physical condition (85%), insufficient care at home compared to a hospital (84%), imminent hospitalization (63%), and the patient's concern about being burdensome (60%). Conclusion Seventy-three percent of terminally ill cancer patients admitted to palliative care units had no other options for care. Improving outpatient treatment at palliative care units and establishing a palliative care system in patients' homes would greatly benefit patients and their families.
KW - Attitude to death
KW - Home care
KW - Neoplasms
KW - Palliative care
KW - Retrospective studies
KW - Terminal care
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U2 - 10.1007/s00520-012-1405-z
DO - 10.1007/s00520-012-1405-z
M3 - Article
C2 - 22354623
AN - SCOPUS:84863449735
SN - 0941-4355
VL - 20
SP - 893
EP - 900
JO - Supportive Care in Cancer
JF - Supportive Care in Cancer
IS - 5
ER -