Guo Qing, Wang Yanhui, Zheng Ruishuang, Wang Jun, Zhu Ping, Wang Li, Dong Fengqi
Department of Hepatobiliary Cancer, Key Laboratory of Cancer Prevention and Therapy, Tianjin Medical University Cancer Hospital and Institute, National Clinical Research Centre for Cancer, Tianjin's Clinical Research Centre for Cancer, Floor 8th, Building C, Huanhu West Road, Hexi District, Tianjin, 300060, China.
Centre for Human Geography and Urban Development, Guangzhou University, Guangzhou, Guangdong, China.
BMC Nurs. 2024 Dec 20;23(1):939. doi: 10.1186/s12912-024-02641-1.
Preparing novice oncology nurses to competently care for dying cancer patients is challenging, particularly in cultures where death and dying are taboo subjects. This study aims to explore the various profiles of death competence among novice oncology nurses through latent profile analysis, identifies distinguishing characteristics, and examines influential factors within these subgroups.
A multisite cross-sectional study was conducted from August 2021 to July 2022, involving 506 novice oncology nurses from six tertiary cancer hospitals and centers across mainland China. Participants completed a questionnaire that included the Chinese version of the Coping with Death Scale, the Big Five Personality Traits Scale, and general demographic information. Latent profile analysis, univariate analysis, and multinomial logistic regression were utilized to identify death competence profiles and interindividual variability.
Three latent profiles were identified: 'Low Death Competence with Attitude Change toward Living' group (21.5%, Profile 1), 'Moderate Death Competence' group (52.0%, Profile 2), and 'High Death Competence with No Attitude Change toward Living' group (26.5%, Profile 3). Specifically, for Profile 2, being male and having a conscientious personality were facilitating factors for death competence. Conversely, an agreeable personality and frequent exposure to patient death emerged as hindering factors. In Profile 3, working in Intensive Care Units and Palliative Care Units, along with personality traits of conscientiousness, openness, or extraversion, were associated with higher death competence, although frequent exposure to patient death was identified as a potential hindering factor even for this highly competent group.
Significant variability in death competence exists among the three groups of novice oncology nurses, reflecting the complexity of their experiences. These findings underscore the necessity for tailored, culturally sensitive death education and training programs. This study also provides vital insights for developing such programs, customized to meet the unique characteristics and needs of different subgroups of novice oncology nurses, ultimately enhancing their death competence and improving end-of-life cancer care.
让肿瘤护理新手有能力妥善照顾濒死癌症患者具有挑战性,尤其是在死亡和濒死是禁忌话题的文化背景下。本研究旨在通过潜在剖面分析探索肿瘤护理新手死亡能力的不同特征,识别其显著特征,并研究这些亚组中的影响因素。
于2021年8月至2022年7月进行了一项多中心横断面研究,涉及中国大陆六家三级癌症医院和中心的506名肿瘤护理新手。参与者完成了一份问卷,其中包括中文版的应对死亡量表、大五人格特质量表以及一般人口统计学信息。采用潜在剖面分析、单变量分析和多项逻辑回归来识别死亡能力特征和个体间差异。
识别出三种潜在特征:“对生活态度改变的低死亡能力”组(21.5%,特征1)、“中等死亡能力”组(52.0%,特征2)和“对生活态度无改变的高死亡能力”组(26.5%,特征3)。具体而言,对于特征2,男性和具有尽责人格是死亡能力的促进因素。相反,随和的人格和频繁接触患者死亡则成为阻碍因素。在特征3中,在重症监护病房和姑息治疗病房工作,以及尽责、开放或外向的人格特质与更高的死亡能力相关,尽管即使对于这个高能力组,频繁接触患者死亡也被确定为一个潜在的阻碍因素。
三组肿瘤护理新手的死亡能力存在显著差异,反映了他们经历的复杂性。这些发现强调了针对性的、具有文化敏感性的死亡教育和培训项目的必要性。本研究还为制定此类项目提供了重要见解,这些项目可根据肿瘤护理新手不同亚组的独特特征和需求进行定制,最终提高他们的死亡能力并改善癌症临终护理。