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Death rattle: its impact on staff and volunteers in palliative care

Death rattle: its impact on staff and volunteers in palliative care
Death rattle: its impact on staff and volunteers in palliative care
Background: Hospice staff and volunteers frequently hear the sound of death rattle and offer explanations and reassurance to relatives and other patients. This paper describes our study into the impact of hearing the sound of death rattle on hospice staff and volunteers, part of our wider investigation into death rattle.
Methods: Seven focus group meetings were held, involving a total of 41 participants from medical, nursing, chaplaincy, housekeeping and volunteer backgrounds. Meetings were audio-taped and the transcripts analysed using thematic analysis.
Results: Most participants expressed negative feelings about hearing the sound of death rattle and felt that relatives were also distressed by it. Medical and nursing participants reported diverse views on why they intervene. Some acknowledged the influence of their own emotional response to the sound. Others felt that intervention was part of their professional role or that the existence of a therapeutic option made it necessary to intervene.
Conclusion: Death rattle has a negative impact on staff and volunteers who work with dying patients. This effect may influence their decision to intervene when death rattle occurs. Doctors and nurses need to consider why, when and how they intervene and the consequences of that intervention.
death rattle, decision-making, health professionals, volunteers
0269-2163
173-176
Wee, B.L.
99903430-de7a-45d2-a617-fe30620ddde7
Coleman, P.G.
1c55586e-c367-470c-b14b-832edb75c0ce
Hillier, R.
3f95f6e3-c523-47fd-b3d8-bfb7b1fc8125
Holgate, S.T.
2e7c17a9-6796-436e-8772-1fe6d2ac5edc
Wee, B.L.
99903430-de7a-45d2-a617-fe30620ddde7
Coleman, P.G.
1c55586e-c367-470c-b14b-832edb75c0ce
Hillier, R.
3f95f6e3-c523-47fd-b3d8-bfb7b1fc8125
Holgate, S.T.
2e7c17a9-6796-436e-8772-1fe6d2ac5edc

Wee, B.L., Coleman, P.G., Hillier, R. and Holgate, S.T. (2008) Death rattle: its impact on staff and volunteers in palliative care. Palliative Medicine, 22 (2), 173-176. (doi:10.1177/0269216307087146).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: Hospice staff and volunteers frequently hear the sound of death rattle and offer explanations and reassurance to relatives and other patients. This paper describes our study into the impact of hearing the sound of death rattle on hospice staff and volunteers, part of our wider investigation into death rattle.
Methods: Seven focus group meetings were held, involving a total of 41 participants from medical, nursing, chaplaincy, housekeeping and volunteer backgrounds. Meetings were audio-taped and the transcripts analysed using thematic analysis.
Results: Most participants expressed negative feelings about hearing the sound of death rattle and felt that relatives were also distressed by it. Medical and nursing participants reported diverse views on why they intervene. Some acknowledged the influence of their own emotional response to the sound. Others felt that intervention was part of their professional role or that the existence of a therapeutic option made it necessary to intervene.
Conclusion: Death rattle has a negative impact on staff and volunteers who work with dying patients. This effect may influence their decision to intervene when death rattle occurs. Doctors and nurses need to consider why, when and how they intervene and the consequences of that intervention.

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More information

Published date: 2008
Keywords: death rattle, decision-making, health professionals, volunteers

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 57645
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/57645
ISSN: 0269-2163
PURE UUID: 5621285d-a7d1-4d8e-b1e7-4e53878b38dd

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Date deposited: 18 Aug 2008
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 11:07

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Contributors

Author: B.L. Wee
Author: P.G. Coleman
Author: R. Hillier
Author: S.T. Holgate

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