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首页> 外文期刊>BMC Palliative Care >Death talk: gender differences in talking about one’s own impending death
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Death talk: gender differences in talking about one’s own impending death

机译:死亡演讲:谈论自己即将死亡的性别差异

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Background According to common practice based on a generally agreed interpretation of Icelandic law on the rights of patients, health care professionals cannot discuss prognosis and treatment with a patient’s family without that patient’s consent. This limitation poses ethical problems, because research has shown that, in the absence of insight and communication regarding a patient’s impending death, patient’s significant others may subsequently experience long-term psychological distress. It is also reportedly important for most dying patients to know that health care personnel are comfortable with talking about death and dying. There is only very limited information concerning gender differences regarding death talk in terminal care patients. Methods This is a retrospective analysis of detailed prospective “field notes” from chaplain interviews of all patients aged 30–75?years receiving palliative care and/or with DNR (do not resuscitate) written on their charts who requested an interview with a hospital chaplain during a period of 3?years. After all study patients had died, these notes were analyzed to assess the prevalence of patient-initiated discussions regarding their own impending death and whether non-provocative evocation-type interventions had facilitated such communication. Results During the 3-year study period, 195 interviews (114 men, 81 women) were conducted. According to the field notes, 80% of women and 30% of men initiated death talk within the planned 30-minute interviews. After evoking interventions, 59% (67/114) of men and 91% (74/81) of women engaged in death talk. Even with these interventions, at the end of the first interview gender differences were still statistically significant (p?=?0.001). By the end of the second interview gender difference was less, but still statistically significant (p?=?0.001). Conclusions Gender differences in terminal care communication may be radically reduced by using simple evocation methods that are relatively unpretentious, but require considerable clinical training. Men in terminal care are more reluctant than women to enter into discussion regarding their own impending death in clinical settings. Intervention based on non-provocative evocation methods may increase death talk in both genders, the relative increase being higher for men.
机译:背景技术根据基于对患者权利的冰岛法律的普遍认可解释的惯常做法,未经患者的同意,医疗保健专业人员无法与患者的家庭讨论预后和治疗。这种限制带来了道德问题,因为研究表明,在缺乏对患者即将死亡的见识和沟通的情况下,患者的重要他人随后可能会遭受长期的心理困扰。据报道,对于大多数垂死的患者而言,了解医护人员对谈论死亡和垂危也很满意也很重要。关于终末护理患者死亡谈话的性别差异的信息非常有限。方法:这是对所有接受姑息治疗和/或在病历表上写有要求接受医院牧师采访的DNR(不复苏)的30-75岁患者的牧师访谈中详细前瞻性“领域笔记”的回顾性分析。在3年内。在所有研究患者均死亡后,将对这些记录进行分析,以评估由患者发起的有关其自身即将死亡的讨论的发生率,以及非刺激性激发式干预措施是否有助于此类交流。结果在三年研究期间,共进行了195次访谈(114例男性,81例女性)。根据现场记录,在计划的30分钟访谈中,有80%的女性和30%的男性发起了死亡演讲。进行干预后,有59%(67/114)的男性和91%(74/81)的女性参与了死亡谈话。即使采用这些干预措施,在第一次访谈结束时,性别差异仍具有统计学显着性(p = 0.001)。到第二次访谈结束时,性别差异较小,但仍具有统计学意义(p = 0.001)。结论通过使用相对简单的,但需要大量临床培训的简单唤起方法,可以从根本上减少终末护理交流中的性别差异。与妇女相比,接受终末护理的男性比女性更不愿讨论自己在临床环境中即将死亡的问题。基于非挑衅性唤起方法的干预可能会增加男女双方的死亡谈话,男性的相对增长更高。

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