Smith D K, Nehemkis A M, Charter R A
Int J Psychiatry Med. 1983;13(3):221-32. doi: 10.2190/19cn-7715-vlkq-9f25.
The way in which an individual's belief system about death affects fear of death (FOD) has been largely neglected in the thanatology literature. The present study addresses the dimension of certainty or uncertainty with which beliefs about death are held and examines the way in which such attitudes might affect the FOD in dying patients. Twenty terminally ill patients were administered three FOD measures and a death perspective scale which assessed eight death attitudes. FOD among the terminally ill at both the conscious and fantasy level was low. Increased age was associated with declining conscious FOD, independent of life expectancy. Of the eight death perspectives, the attitudes toward death as afterlife-of-reward most directly tap the dimension of certainty or uncertainty. A significant curvilinear relationship emerged between this death perspective and FOD, suggesting that beliefs are a less critical determinant of death fear than is the certainty with which these beliefs are held. The study raises research and clinical issues pertinent to understanding FOD in dying patients.
个体关于死亡的信念系统影响死亡恐惧(FOD)的方式在死亡学文献中很大程度上被忽视了。本研究探讨了关于死亡的信念所持有的确定性或不确定性维度,并考察了这些态度可能影响临终患者死亡恐惧的方式。对20名晚期绝症患者进行了三项死亡恐惧测量和一个死亡观念量表,该量表评估了八种死亡态度。临终患者在意识和幻想层面的死亡恐惧都较低。年龄增长与意识层面死亡恐惧的下降相关,与预期寿命无关。在八种死亡观念中,将死亡视为死后有回报的态度最直接地体现了确定性或不确定性维度。这种死亡观念与死亡恐惧之间出现了显著的曲线关系,表明信念并非死亡恐惧的关键决定因素,而持有这些信念的确定性才是。该研究提出了与理解临终患者死亡恐惧相关的研究和临床问题。