Wen Fur-Hsing, Chou Wen-Chi, Hou Ming-Mo, Su Po-Jung, Shen Wen-Chi, Chen Jen-Shi, Chang Wen-Cheng, Hsu Mei Huang, Tang Siew Tzuh
Department of International Business, Soochow University, Taipei, Taiwan, China.
Division of Hematology-Oncology, Chang Gung Memorial Hospital at Linkou, Tao-Yuan, Taiwan, China.
Psychooncology. 2022 Sep;31(9):1502-1509. doi: 10.1002/pon.5996. Epub 2022 Jul 16.
Preparing family surrogates for patient death and end-of-life (EOL) decision making may reduce surrogate decisional conflict and regret. Preparedness for patient death involves cognitive and emotional preparedness. We assessed the associations of surrogates' death-preparedness states (that integrate both cognitive and emotional preparedness for patient death) with surrogates' decisional conflict and regret.
Associations of 173 surrogates' death-preparedness states (no, cognitive-only, emotional-only, and sufficient preparedness states) with decisional conflict (measured by the Decision Conflict Scale) and heightened decisional regret (Decision Regret Scale scores >25) were evaluated using hierarchical linear modeling and hierarchical generalized linear modeling, respectively, during a longitudinal observational study at a medical center over cancer patients' last 6 months.
Surrogates reported high decisional conflict (mean [standard deviation] = 41.48 [6.05]), and 52.7% of assessments exceeded the threshold for heightened decisional regret. Surrogates in the cognitive-only preparedness state reported a significantly higher level of decisional conflict (β = 3.010 [95% CI = 1.124, 4.896]) than those in the sufficient preparedness state. Surrogates in the no (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] [95% CI] = 0.293 [0.113, 0.733]) and emotional-only (AOR [95% CI] = 0.359 [0.149, 0.866]) preparedness states were less likely to suffer heightened decisional regret than those in the sufficient preparedness state.
Surrogates' decisional conflict and heightened decisional regret are associated with their death-preparedness states. Improving emotional preparedness for the patient's death among surrogates in the cognitive-only preparedness state and meeting the specific needs of those in the no, emotional-only, and sufficient preparedness states are actionable high-quality EOL-care interventions that may lessen decisional conflict and decisional regret.
让患者家属为患者死亡及临终(EOL)决策做好准备,可能会减少家属决策冲突和遗憾。对患者死亡的准备包括认知准备和情感准备。我们评估了家属的死亡准备状态(整合了对患者死亡的认知和情感准备)与家属决策冲突和遗憾之间的关联。
在一家医疗中心对癌症患者最后6个月进行的纵向观察研究中,分别使用分层线性模型和分层广义线性模型,评估了173名家属的死亡准备状态(无、仅认知、仅情感和充分准备状态)与决策冲突(用决策冲突量表测量)和高度决策遗憾(决策遗憾量表得分>25)之间的关联。
家属报告了较高的决策冲突(均值[标准差]=41.48[6.05]),52.7%的评估超过了高度决策遗憾的阈值。仅处于认知准备状态的家属报告的决策冲突水平(β=3.010[95%CI=1.124,4.896])显著高于处于充分准备状态的家属。处于无(调整比值比[AOR][95%CI]=0.293[0.113,0.733])和仅情感(AOR[95%CI]=0.359[0.149,0.866])准备状态的家属比处于充分准备状态的家属更不容易遭受高度决策遗憾。
家属的决策冲突和高度决策遗憾与他们的死亡准备状态有关。改善仅处于认知准备状态的家属对患者死亡的情感准备,并满足处于无、仅情感和充分准备状态家属的特定需求,是可行的高质量临终关怀干预措施,可能会减少决策冲突和决策遗憾。