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Sufficient Death Preparedness Correlates to Better Mental Health, Quality of Life, and EOL Care

  • Fur Hsing Wen
  • , Wen Chi Chou
  • , Jen Shi Chen
  • , Wen Cheng Chang
  • , Mei Huang Hsu
  • , Siew Tzuh Tang*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Soochow University
  • Chang Gung Memorial Hospital
  • Chang Gung University
  • Xiamen Chang Gung Hospital

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

16 Scopus citations

Abstract

Context: Patients can prepare for end of life and their forthcoming death to enhance the quality of dying. Objectives: We aimed to longitudinally evaluate the never-before-examined associations of cancer patients' death-preparedness states by conjoint cognitive prognostic awareness and emotional preparedness for death with psychological distress, quality of life (QOL), and end-of-life care received. Methods: In this cohort study, we simultaneously evaluated associations of four previously identified death-preparedness states (no-death-preparedness, cognitive-death-preparedness-only, emotional-death-preparedness-only, and sufficient-death-preparedness states) with anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms, and QOL over 383 cancer patients’ last six months and end-of-life care received in the last month using multivariate hierarchical linear modeling and logistic regression modeling, respectively. Minimal clinically important differences (MCIDs) have been established for anxiety- (1.3–1.8) and depressive- (1.5–1.7) symptom subscales (0–21 Likert scales). Results: Patients in the no-death-preparedness and cognitive-death-preparedness-only states reported increases in anxiety symptoms and depressive symptoms that exceed the MCIDs, and a decline in QOL from those in the sufficient-death-preparedness state. Patients in the emotional-death-preparedness-only state were more (OR [95% CI]=2.38 [1.14, 4.97]) and less (OR [95% CI]=0.38 [0.15, 0.94]) likely to receive chemotherapy/immunotherapy and hospice care, respectively, than those in the sufficient-death-preparedness state. Death-preparedness states were not associated with life-sustaining treatments received in the last month. Conclusion: Conjoint cognitive and emotional preparedness for death is associated with cancer patients’ lower psychological distress, better QOL, reduced anti-cancer therapy, and increased hospice-care utilization. Facilitating accurate prognostic awareness and emotional preparedness for death is justified when consistent with patient circumstances and preferences.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)988-996
Number of pages9
JournalJournal of Pain and Symptom Management
Volume63
Issue number6
DOIs
StatePublished - 06 2022

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 American Academy of Hospice and Palliative Medicine

UN SDGs

This output contributes to the following UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)

  1. SDG 3 - Good Health and Well-being
    SDG 3 Good Health and Well-being

Keywords

  • Death preparedness
  • anxiety symptoms
  • cancer
  • depressive symptoms
  • end of life care
  • hospice care
  • neoplasms
  • palliative chemotherapy
  • quality of life

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