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

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal Article peer-review

10 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

Keywords

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

Fingerprint

Dive into the research topics of 'Sufficient Death Preparedness Correlates to Better Mental Health, Quality of Life, and EOL Care'. Together they form a unique fingerprint.

Cite this