TY - JOUR
T1 - The wish to die among palliative home care clients in Ontario, Canada
T2 - A cross-sectional study Psychosocial
AU - Freeman, Shannon
AU - Smith, Trevor Frise
AU - Neufeld, Eva
AU - Fisher, Kathy
AU - Ebihara, Satoru
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors wish to kindly acknowledge the dedication, time and support invested by clinicians and staff of the Community Care Access Centres in Ontario, Canada to pilot this instrument and ensuring high quality data collection. SF wishes to acknowledge the Canadian Institute for Health Research for supporting her research through a Post-Doctoral Fellowship Award (2015-2018).
Publisher Copyright:
© 2016 Freeman et al.
PY - 2016/2/29
Y1 - 2016/2/29
N2 - Background: In the pursuit to provide the highest quality of person centered palliative care, client preferences, needs, and wishes surrounding end of life should be used to inform the plan of care. During a clinical assessment for care services, clients may voluntarily express a 'wish to die' either directly to the clinician or it may be indirectly reported second-hand to the clinician through an informal caregiver or family member. This is the first study using data gathered from the interRAI Palliative Care Assessment instrument (interRAI PC) to examine socio-demographic, clinical, and psycho-social factors of palliative home care clients with the voluntary expression of a 'wish to die now'. Factors associated with the risk for depression within this group were also identified. Awareness and understanding of clients who express the 'wish to die' is needed to better tailor a person-centered approach to end-of-life care. Methods: This cross-sectional study included assessment records gathered from 4,840 palliative home care clients collected as part of pilot implementation of the interRAI PC assessment instrument in Ontario, Canada from 2006 through 2011. Results: During the clinical assessment, 308 palliative home care clients (6.7 %) had voluntarily expressed a 'wish to die now'. Independent factors emerging from multivariate logistic regression analyses predicting the expression of a 'wish to die' included not being married/widowed, a shorter estimated prognosis, depressive symptoms, functional impairment, too much sleep (excessive amount), feeling completion regarding financial/legal matters, and struggling with the meaning of life. Among persons who expressed a 'wish to die now', those who exhibited depressive symptoms (23.8 %, n = 64) were also more likely to exhibit cognitive impairment, have decline in cognition in the last 90 days, exhibit weight loss, have informal caregivers exhibiting distress, 'not have a consistent positive outlook on life' and report 'struggling with the meaning of life'. Conclusion: When clients voluntary express a wish to die clinicians should take notice and initiate follow-up to better understand the context of this meaning for the individual. Clients who expressed a 'wish to die' did not all experience pain, depression, and psychological distress suggesting an individualized approach to care management be taken.
AB - Background: In the pursuit to provide the highest quality of person centered palliative care, client preferences, needs, and wishes surrounding end of life should be used to inform the plan of care. During a clinical assessment for care services, clients may voluntarily express a 'wish to die' either directly to the clinician or it may be indirectly reported second-hand to the clinician through an informal caregiver or family member. This is the first study using data gathered from the interRAI Palliative Care Assessment instrument (interRAI PC) to examine socio-demographic, clinical, and psycho-social factors of palliative home care clients with the voluntary expression of a 'wish to die now'. Factors associated with the risk for depression within this group were also identified. Awareness and understanding of clients who express the 'wish to die' is needed to better tailor a person-centered approach to end-of-life care. Methods: This cross-sectional study included assessment records gathered from 4,840 palliative home care clients collected as part of pilot implementation of the interRAI PC assessment instrument in Ontario, Canada from 2006 through 2011. Results: During the clinical assessment, 308 palliative home care clients (6.7 %) had voluntarily expressed a 'wish to die now'. Independent factors emerging from multivariate logistic regression analyses predicting the expression of a 'wish to die' included not being married/widowed, a shorter estimated prognosis, depressive symptoms, functional impairment, too much sleep (excessive amount), feeling completion regarding financial/legal matters, and struggling with the meaning of life. Among persons who expressed a 'wish to die now', those who exhibited depressive symptoms (23.8 %, n = 64) were also more likely to exhibit cognitive impairment, have decline in cognition in the last 90 days, exhibit weight loss, have informal caregivers exhibiting distress, 'not have a consistent positive outlook on life' and report 'struggling with the meaning of life'. Conclusion: When clients voluntary express a wish to die clinicians should take notice and initiate follow-up to better understand the context of this meaning for the individual. Clients who expressed a 'wish to die' did not all experience pain, depression, and psychological distress suggesting an individualized approach to care management be taken.
KW - End-of-life
KW - Home care
KW - Hospice palliative care
KW - Older adults
KW - interRAI
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U2 - 10.1186/s12904-016-0093-8
DO - 10.1186/s12904-016-0093-8
M3 - Article
C2 - 26924601
AN - SCOPUS:84959532726
SN - 1472-684X
VL - 15
JO - BMC Palliative Care
JF - BMC Palliative Care
IS - 1
M1 - 24
ER -