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黑人和白人门诊癌症患者在临终决策方面的差异。

Differences in end-of-life decision making among black and white ambulatory cancer patients.

作者信息

McKinley E D, Garrett J M, Evans A T, Danis M

机构信息

Department of Medicine, MetroHealth Medical Center, Cleveland, Ohio 44109-1998, USA.

出版信息

J Gen Intern Med. 1996 Nov;11(11):651-6. doi: 10.1007/BF02600155.

Abstract

OBJECTIVE

African-American (black) and white individuals have been shown to differ in their desire for life-sustaining treatments and their use of living wills for end-of-life care, but the reasons for these differences are unclear. This study was designed to test the hypothesis that these ethnic differences exist because black patients trust the health care system less, fear inadequate medical treatment more, and feel less confident that living wills can give them more control over their terminal care.

DESIGN

Cross-sectional, in-person survey conducted from November 1993 to June 1994.

SETTING

Two medical oncology clinics with 40% to 50% black patient representation.

PARTICIPANTS

Ambulatory cancer patients, 92 black and 114 white, who were awaiting their physician visits and agreed to participate (76% of those eligible). Patients were excluded if they were under age 40 or if they had nonmelanoma skin cancer only.

MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS

Black ambulatory cancer patients wanted more life-sustaining treatments (odds ratio [OR] 2.8; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.4-5.3), and were less likely to want to complete a living will at some time in the future (OR 0.36; 95% CI 0.17-0.75) than were white patients after controlling for socioeconomic variables. However, these differences were not related to lack of trust or fear of inadequate medical treatment in this study population. Both groups of patients trusted the health care system and felt that physicians treated patients equally well. Neither group feared inadequate or excessive medical care, and the majority of both groups agreed that living wills would help them keep control over their terminal care.

CONCLUSIONS

Black and white cancer patients make different end-of-life choices, even after adjusting for likely explanatory variables. The other factors that influence decision making remain unclear and need to be further explored if physicians are to understand and help their patients make choices for end-of-life care.

摘要

目的

研究表明,非裔美国人(黑人)和白人在维持生命治疗的意愿以及使用生前预嘱进行临终关怀方面存在差异,但这些差异的原因尚不清楚。本研究旨在检验以下假设:这些种族差异的存在是因为黑人患者对医疗保健系统的信任度较低,对医疗治疗不足的恐惧更大,并且对生前预嘱能够让他们对临终护理有更多控制权的信心较小。

设计

1993年11月至1994年6月进行的横断面面对面调查。

地点

两家肿瘤内科诊所,黑人患者占比40%至50%。

参与者

92名黑人及114名白人门诊癌症患者,他们正在等待医生问诊并同意参与研究(符合条件者的76%)。如果患者年龄在40岁以下或仅患有非黑色素瘤皮肤癌,则被排除在外。

测量指标及主要结果

在控制社会经济变量后,黑人门诊癌症患者比白人患者更希望接受更多维持生命的治疗(优势比[OR]为2.8;95%置信区间[CI]为1.4 - 5.3),且未来某个时候想要完成生前预嘱的可能性更小(OR为0.36;95%CI为0.17 - 0.75)。然而,在本研究人群中,这些差异与缺乏信任或对医疗治疗不足的恐惧无关。两组患者都信任医疗保健系统,并认为医生对患者的治疗同样良好。两组都不担心医疗护理不足或过度,并且两组中的大多数人都认为生前预嘱会帮助他们掌控临终护理。

结论

即使在调整了可能的解释变量后,黑人和白人癌症患者在临终选择上仍存在差异。如果医生想要理解并帮助患者做出临终关怀选择,那么影响决策的其他因素仍不清楚,需要进一步探索。

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