4.6 Article

Factors associated with cancer patients' distinct death-preparedness states

Journal

PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY
Volume 32, Issue 7, Pages 1048-1056

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/pon.6146

Keywords

death preparedness; functional dependency; patient-family communication; prognostic awareness; prognostic disclosure; symptom distress

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This study aimed to identify factors associated with different death-preparedness states among cancer patients. The results showed that factors such as gender, age, financial hardship, and symptom distress were related to the death-preparedness states. Younger age and greater functional dependence were associated with the cognitive-only state, physician prognostic disclosure was associated with the cognitive-only and sufficient-preparedness states, patient-family communication reduced the likelihood of the emotional-only state, and perceived social support influenced both the cognitive-only and emotional-only states.
Background/ObjectiveFacilitating death preparedness is important for improving cancer patients' quality of death and dying. We aimed to identify factors associated with the four death-preparedness states (no-preparedness, cognitive-only, emotional-only, and sufficient-preparedness) focusing on modifiable factors. MethodsIn this cohort study, we identified factors associated with 314 Taiwanese cancer patients' death-preparedness states from time-invariant socio-demographics and lagged time-varying modifiable variables, including disease burden, physician prognostic disclosure, patient-family communication on end-of-life (EOL) issues, and perceived social support using hierarchical generalized linear modeling. ResultsPatients who were male, older, without financial hardship to make ends meet, and suffered lower symptom distress were more likely to be in the emotional-only and sufficient-preparedness states than the no-death-preparedness-state. Younger age (adjusted odds ratio [95% confidence interval] = 0.95 [0.91, 0.99] per year increase in age) and greater functional dependency (1.05 [1.00, 1.11]) were associated with being in the cognitive-only state. Physician prognostic disclosure increased the likelihood of being in the cognitive-only (51.51 [14.01, 189.36]) and sufficient-preparedness (47.42 [10.93, 205.79]) states, whereas higher patient-family communication on EOL issues reduced likelihood for the emotional-only state (0.38 [0.21, 0.69]). Higher perceived social support reduced the likelihood of cognitive-only (0.94 [0.91, 0.98]) but increased the chance of emotional-only (1.09 [1.05, 1.14]) state membership. ConclusionsDeath-preparedness states are associated with patients' socio-demographics, disease burden, physician prognostic disclosure, patient-family communication on EOL issues, and perceived social support. Providing accurate prognostic disclosure, adequately managing symptom distress, supporting those with higher functional dependence, promoting empathetic patient-family communication on EOL issues, and enhancing perceived social support may facilitate death preparedness.

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