1Department of Preventive Medicine, Eulji University School of Medicine, Daejeon, Korea
2Hospice & Palliative Care Branch, National Cancer Control Institute, National Cancer Center, Goyang, Korea
Copyright © 2017 by the Korean Cancer Association
This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted non-commercial use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Values are presented as mean±standard deviation. Scale: 1, not very much; 2, not much; 3, somewhat; 4, much; 5, very much.
Values within a row with different superscripts (a-c) are different (p < 0.05; one-way ANOVA followed by Bonferroni post hoc). p-values were determined by ANOVA. EOL, end-of-life; PCT, palliative care team.
Variable | No. (%) (n=440) |
---|---|
Sex | |
Male | 341 (77.5) |
Female | 99 (22.5) |
Age (yr) | |
Mean±SD | 40.7±8.8 |
< 30 | 38 (8.6) |
30-39 | 218 (49.6) |
≥ 40 | 184 (41.8) |
Affiliated with a designated PCU | |
Yes | 80 (18.2) |
No | 360 (81.8) |
Proportion of terminal cancer patients among one’s patients (%) | |
None | 41 (9.1) |
1-9 | 193 (44.0) |
10-19 | 85 (19.4) |
20-29 | 45 (10.4) |
≥ 30 | 75 (17.1) |
Specialty | |
Hemato-oncology | 65 (14.8) |
Other internal medicine | 89 (20.2) |
Surgery | 224 (50.9) |
Radiotherapy | 46 (10.5) |
Miscellaneous | 16 (3.6) |
Hospital type | |
Tertiary hospital | 258 (59.6) |
Secondary hospital | 112 (25.9) |
General hospital | 6 (1.4) |
Clinic | 1 (0.2) |
Long-term care hospital | 1 (0.2) |
Others | 55 (12.7) |
Experience of hospice and palliative care education | |
Yes | 71 (16.1) |
No | 369 (83.9) |
Willingness to consult with a palliative care team | |
Yes | 39 (8.9) |
No | 401 (91.1) |
Needs of EOL care by terminal cancer patients and their family | Satisfaction with EOL care to terminal cancer patients and their family | Expected effectiveness of PCTs activities on EOL care | p-value | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Control of pain and physical symptoms | 4.725±0.535a | 3.690±0.656b | 4.063±0.718c | < 0.001 |
Psychological care for the patient and their family | 4.491±0.619a | 3.007±0.822b | 4.293±0.612c | < 0.001 |
Communication | 4.427±0.618a | 3.334±0.760b | 4.152±0.693c | < 0.001 |
Socio-economic care | 4.252±0.706a | 2.670±0.861b | 3.840±0.820c | < 0.001 |
Spiritual care | 3.814±0.849a | 2.500±0.961b | 3.866±0.853a | < 0.001 |
Care for dying patients | 4.084±0.760a | 2.670±0.963b | 4.130±0.756a | < 0.001 |
Advanced care planning | 4.139±0.683a | 2.964±0.829b | 3.879±0.785c | < 0.001 |
Care for the bereaved | 3.723±0.842a | 2.220±0.975b | 3.878±0.850c | < 0.001 |
Cause of doctor's difficulties with EOL care | Difficulties in EOL care | Expected effectiveness of PCT activities | p-value |
---|---|---|---|
Lack of time for care | 3.700±0.411 | 3.800±0.338 | 0.061 |
Psychological burden | 3.661±0.419 | 3.893±0.355 | < 0.001 |
Lack of experience or knowledge | 3.152±0.420 | 4.014±0.327 | < 0.001 |
Conflicts with hospital policy regarding discharge indications | 3.600±0.408 | 3.816±0.341 | < 0.001 |
Total | No expected effectiveness of PCT activities (n=47, 10.7%) | Expected effectiveness of PCT activities (n=392, 89.3%) | p-value | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Referring my patient to HPC means “giving up on my patient” | ||||
Agree | 44 (10.0) | 14 (31.8) | 30 (68.2) | < 0.001 |
Disagree | 396 (90.0) | 33 (8.3) | 363 (91.7) | |
Referring my patient to HPC makes him lose hope | ||||
Agree | 75 (17.0) | 18 (24.0) | 57 (76.0) | < 0.001 |
Disagree | 365 (83.0) | 29 (7.9) | 336 (92.1) | |
I only transfer my patient to HPC at the time of impending death | ||||
Agree | 89 (20.3) | 17 (19.1) | 72 (80.9) | 0.004 |
Disagree | 351 (79.7) | 30 (8.5) | 321 (91.5) | |
Care for a dying patient is my clinical obligation | ||||
Agree | 170 (38.6) | 26 (15.3) | 144 (84.7) | 0.013 |
Disagree | 270 (61.4) | 21 (7.8) | 249 (92.2) | |
Care for terminal cancer patients and family is a worthwhile activity | ||||
Agree | 196 (44.6) | 31 (15.8) | 165 (84.2) | 0.002 |
Disagree | 243 (55.4) | 16 (6.6) | 227 (93.4) |
No. (%) | Adjusted odds ratio | 95% CI | |
---|---|---|---|
Sex | |||
Male | 341 (77.5) | 1 | |
Female | 99 (22.5) | 2.672 | 1.035-6.892 |
Referring my patient to the hospice and palliative care means “giving up on my patient” | |||
Agree | 44 (10.0) | 1 | |
Disagree | 396 (90.0) | 3.075 | 1.324-7.127 |
Experience with hospice and palliative care education | |||
Yes | 71 (16.1) | 1 | |
No | 369 (83.9) | 3.337 | 1.600-7.125 |
SD, standard deviation; PCU, hospice and palliative care unit.
Values are presented as mean±standard deviation. Scale: 1, not very much; 2, not much; 3, somewhat; 4, much; 5, very much. Values within a row with different superscripts (a-c) are different (p < 0.05; one-way ANOVA followed by Bonferroni
Values are presented as mean±standard deviation. Scale: 1, not very much; 2, not much; 3, somewhat; 4, much; 5, very much. p-value by t test. EOL, end-of-life; PCT, palliative care team.
Values are presented as number (%). HPC, hospice and palliative care; PCT, palliative care team.
Adjusted for attitudes associated with hospice and palliative care such as pending death, loss of hope, and worthwhile activity, hospital type, age, percentage of terminal cancer patients, designated hospice unit, specialty. CI, confidence interval.