Physicians' experiences and perspectives regarding the use of continuous sedation until death for cancer patients in the context of psychological and existential suffering at the end of life
Physicians' experiences and perspectives regarding the use of continuous sedation until death for cancer patients in the context of psychological and existential suffering at the end of life
Objective: the use of continuous sedation until death for terminally ill cancer patients with unbearable and untreatable psychological and existential suffering remains controversial, and little in-depth insight exists into the circumstances in which physicians resort to it.
Methods: our study was conducted in Belgium, the Netherlands, and the UK in hospitals, PCUs/hospices, and at home. We held interviews with 35 physicians most involved in the care of cancer patients who had psychological and existential suffering and had been continuously sedated until death.
Results: in the studied countries, three groups of patients were distinguished regarding the origin of their psychological and existential suffering. The first group had preexisting psychological problems before they became ill, the second developed psychological and existential suffering during their disease trajectory, and the third presented psychological symptoms that were characteristic of their disease. Before they resorted to the use of sedation, physicians reported that they had considered an array of pharmacological and psychological interventions that were ineffective or inappropriate to relieve this suffering. Necessary conditions for using sedation in this context were for most physicians the presence of refractory symptoms, a short life expectancy, and an explicit patient request for sedation.
Conclusions: physicians in our study used continuous sedation until death in the context of psychological and existential suffering after considering several pharmacological and psychological interventions. Further research and debate are needed on how and by whom this suffering at the end of life should be best treated, taking into account patients' individual preferences
Anquinet, Livia
f8e02957-41b4-4813-9a2a-ee7f27e3a36e
Rietjens, J.
5657d941-6a9f-4ab6-bc92-0a9292ef7f4e
van der Heide, A.
347983c5-294d-4855-92ef-bede9d65a6df
Bruinsma, Sophie
30b4a582-3d4d-42ef-b934-f80fba90602a
Janssens, Rien
565d91f6-b3e5-4f58-9e73-4a7943cf9b07
Deliens, Luc
94dcbddb-c7bc-4a77-a11d-0e8a0b278d62
Addington-Hall, Julia
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Smithson, W. Henry
8cd7b3de-56d2-408b-a0fc-df14af126156
Seymour, Jane
b001b1f3-1ac4-495d-837f-10ca5154b5af
Anquinet, Livia
f8e02957-41b4-4813-9a2a-ee7f27e3a36e
Rietjens, J.
5657d941-6a9f-4ab6-bc92-0a9292ef7f4e
van der Heide, A.
347983c5-294d-4855-92ef-bede9d65a6df
Bruinsma, Sophie
30b4a582-3d4d-42ef-b934-f80fba90602a
Janssens, Rien
565d91f6-b3e5-4f58-9e73-4a7943cf9b07
Deliens, Luc
94dcbddb-c7bc-4a77-a11d-0e8a0b278d62
Addington-Hall, Julia
87560cc4-7562-4f9b-b908-81f3b603fdd8
Smithson, W. Henry
8cd7b3de-56d2-408b-a0fc-df14af126156
Seymour, Jane
b001b1f3-1ac4-495d-837f-10ca5154b5af
Anquinet, Livia, Rietjens, J., van der Heide, A., Bruinsma, Sophie, Janssens, Rien, Deliens, Luc, Addington-Hall, Julia, Smithson, W. Henry and Seymour, Jane
(2013)
Physicians' experiences and perspectives regarding the use of continuous sedation until death for cancer patients in the context of psychological and existential suffering at the end of life.
Psycho-Oncology.
(doi:10.1002/pon.3450).
(PMID:24307235)
Abstract
Objective: the use of continuous sedation until death for terminally ill cancer patients with unbearable and untreatable psychological and existential suffering remains controversial, and little in-depth insight exists into the circumstances in which physicians resort to it.
Methods: our study was conducted in Belgium, the Netherlands, and the UK in hospitals, PCUs/hospices, and at home. We held interviews with 35 physicians most involved in the care of cancer patients who had psychological and existential suffering and had been continuously sedated until death.
Results: in the studied countries, three groups of patients were distinguished regarding the origin of their psychological and existential suffering. The first group had preexisting psychological problems before they became ill, the second developed psychological and existential suffering during their disease trajectory, and the third presented psychological symptoms that were characteristic of their disease. Before they resorted to the use of sedation, physicians reported that they had considered an array of pharmacological and psychological interventions that were ineffective or inappropriate to relieve this suffering. Necessary conditions for using sedation in this context were for most physicians the presence of refractory symptoms, a short life expectancy, and an explicit patient request for sedation.
Conclusions: physicians in our study used continuous sedation until death in the context of psychological and existential suffering after considering several pharmacological and psychological interventions. Further research and debate are needed on how and by whom this suffering at the end of life should be best treated, taking into account patients' individual preferences
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e-pub ahead of print date: 2013
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Faculty of Health Sciences
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Local EPrints ID: 362964
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/362964
PURE UUID: 7a7b6331-c17a-49e6-ba32-e386a4082ed3
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Date deposited: 17 Mar 2014 12:44
Last modified: 14 Mar 2024 16:16
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Author:
Livia Anquinet
Author:
J. Rietjens
Author:
A. van der Heide
Author:
Sophie Bruinsma
Author:
Rien Janssens
Author:
Luc Deliens
Author:
W. Henry Smithson
Author:
Jane Seymour
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