| Literature DB >> 22606338 |
Cristina Monforte-Royo1, Christian Villavicencio-Chávez, Joaquin Tomás-Sábado, Vinita Mahtani-Chugani, Albert Balaguer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: There is a need for an in-depth approach to the meaning of the wish to hasten death (WTHD). This study aims to understand the experience of patients with serious or incurable illness who express such a wish. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22606338 PMCID: PMC3351420 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0037117
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Meta-ethnography process according to Noblit and Hare.
Final database search strategy.
| 1. Desire to hasten death/ | 30. Field studies/ |
| 2. Wish to hasten death/ | 31. Theoretical sample/ |
| 3. Euthanasia/ | 32. Discourse analysis/ |
| 4. Assisted Suicide/ | 33. Focus groups/ |
| 5. Decisions end of life/ | 34. Phenomenology/or ethnography/or ethnological research.mp. [mp = title, subject heading, abstract, instrumentation] |
| 6. 1 or 2 or 3 or 4 or 5 | 35. (qualitative or phenomenol |
| 7. Chronic disease/ | 36. (grounded adj (theor |
| 8. Chronic illness/ | 37. (constant adj (comparative or comparison)).tw. |
| 9. Advanced disease/ | 38. (purpos |
| 10. Advanced illness/ | 39. (focus adj group |
| 11. Advanced cancer/ | 40. (emic or etic or hermeneutic |
| 12. 7 or 8 or 9 or 10 or 11 | 41. (data adj saturat |
| 13. 6 and 12 | 42. (participant adj observ |
| 14. Qualitative studies/or qualitative | 43. (Heidegger |
| 15. Interviews/or interview | 44. (van adj manen |
| 16. Case stud | 45. (van adj kaam |
| 17. Case studies/or case study | 46. (merleau adj ponty |
| 18. 14 or 15 or 16 or 17 | 47. (Husserl |
| 19. 13 and 18 | 48. (field adj (study or studies or research)).tw. |
| 20. Qualitative Studies/ | 49. (lived adj experience |
| 21. Phenomenological Research/ | 50. Narrative analysis.tw. |
| 22. Ethnographic Research/ | 51. Discourse |
| 23. Ethnonursing Research/ | 52. Human science.tw. |
| 24. Grounded Theory/ | 53. Life experiences/ |
| 25. Exp | 54. Convenience sample/ |
| 26. Purposive Sample/ | 55. Exp |
| 27. Exp | 56. Or/14–55 |
| 28. Content analysis/or thematic analysis/ | 57. 6 and 56 |
| 29. Constant comparative method/ | 58. 12 or 57 |
Key to abbreviations as used in Medline (PubMed):
, truncation; tw, text word; adj, adjective.
Figure 2Flowchart of search results.
Methodological Quality of included studies assessed with CASP (1999): qualitative research checklist.
| Reporting Criteria (CASP) | No (n = 7) | References of studies reporting each criterion |
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Quotations from participants and authors of primary studies to illustrate each theme.
| Themes/– Categories | Quotations from participants in primary studies | Interpretations of findings offered by authors |
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| – Loss of function | ‘Um, the ability to perform simple things like you know, going to the bathroom on your own and not through a bag, um, breathing with your own lungs, not dependent upon a machine to keep the body parts functioning, um being able to do anything, I mean as long as you can think then you can live, but if you can't no longer even formulate a thought due to dementia or you know the ravages of the disease. You know, if you were to stand there in your former self, would you want to see yourself in that position? I know I wouldn't. You get to the point where there's no return, you know, I can understand somebody saying, well geez, you know, like I used to be somebody, but now, like I mean, you know, I'm no better than like a doll, somebody has to dress me and feed me and I guess it's uh, I don't know how to explain it, really’ | Loss of self. |
| ‘There were many times when I was in such pain and such misery. I said, let me go… finished…no more of this torture’ | The immediate situation was unendurable and required instant action. | |
| ‘You don't know how much I am suffering. Come and deal with me; I need your attention and help’ | ||
| ‘You turn them over, they're in pain. They're going to shit themselves, they're going to piss themselves, they're going to lie there and have someone do all their bodily functions and just, they're going to suffer, the whole time, there's going to be no happiness, they're going to go down to 60–70 pounds, they're just going to, their whole last weeks of life is just going to be pain and agony and people coming in, people being upset, them being upset’ | Disintegration. | |
| ‘I'm inconveniencing, I'm still inconveniencing other people who look after me and stuff like that. I don't want to be like that. I wouldn't enjoy it, I wouldn't, I wouldn't. No, I'd rather die’ | Disintegration. Symptoms and loss of function can give rise to dependency on others, a situation that was perceived as intolerable. | |
| ‘I can't move, just lie here… feeling like a vegetable…a useless person… needing people to feed me’ | Perception of suffering for self and significant to others. | |
| ‘…the terrible weakness and the nausea and just not feeling like you can do anything. …And it's kind of like goals that I actually have or things that I want to accomplish are slowly being taken away… it's kind of like the realm of the possible…is shrinking’ | Feeling weak, tired and uncomfortable. Illness-related experiences. | |
| ‘There have been times I've felt so much a burden on my family that maybe it is best for me to die just to relieve them of going through the terminal phase of my disease’ | A gesture of altruism. | |
| ‘There were many times when I was in such pain and such misery. I said, let me go… finished…no more of this torture’ | The immediate situation was unendurable and required instant action. | |
| ‘You don't know how much I am suffering. Come and deal with me; I need your attention and help’ | ||
| – Loss of control | ‘In the future when I can't manage, I would feel very bothersome and very suffering as if I'm really burdening them. I'm afraid of having others to serve me’ | Anticipation of a future worse than death itself. |
| ‘…if I'm going to be rolling around in my own faeces because I have no control, then forget it’ | Loss of self. | |
| ‘Dignity is that I have control over my body, when, when, not not a virus that is going to take my life. I'm the one who's going to decide when my life will end, not a virus, and not with great pain. Not anything else other than in, in my control. It is my control, my choice to do’ | ||
| ‘When I'm in pain, it is not so much the pain, it's the loss of control and the helplessness’ | Desire to hasten death as an expression of despair. | |
| ‘I will do things my way and the hell with everything and everybody else. Nobody is going to talk me in or out of a darn thing…what will be, will be; but what will be, will be done my way. I will always be in control’ | Desire for control. | |
| ‘In the future when I can't manage, I would feel very bothersome and very suffering as if I'm really burdening them. I'm afraid of having others to serve me’ | Anticipation of a future worse than death itself. | |
| – Sense of ‘loss of dignity’ | ‘I think we should all be allowed to die with our dignity intact’ | Participants' experience of disintegration. |
| ‘No matter how much they love you, you are always a burden. You automatically become a burden to everyone. Even to your own missus’ | Being perceived as a burden to others. | |
| ‘…not wanting to be seen by those that love me as this skin-and-bone frail, demented person. In other words, I don't want that image of me for me, and I don't want that image to be kind of a last image that my daughters and loved ones have of me. And that's just a dignity issue’ | Loss of sense of self. | |
| ‘I'm not comfortable, and I can't do anything, so as far as I'm concerned in quality of life I'm not living; I'm existing as a dependent non-person. I've lost, in effect, my essence’ | ||
| ‘Oh, it's the dignity and wholeness of my body, as well as spirit. And, it is, it's cruel too for others to have to do this when there's no end in sight, other than death. To just, to clean me up. I just don't want that…’ | Loss of self. | |
| ‘After a while, your family, who you love so dearly, will remember you as a washed-out role model… It will remind them of what they have to go through, the lack of strength, the weakness, and so forth’ | The dying process itself was so difficult that an early death was preferred. | |
| ‘You've become a bag of potatoes to be moved from the spot to spot, to be rushed back and forth from the hospital, to be carried to your doctors' appointments or wheeled in a wheelchair, and it really does take away any self-worth, any dignity, or any will to continue to live’ | Disintegration. | |
| ‘I think we should all be allowed to die with our dignity intact’ | Participants' experience of disintegration. | |
| – Loss of meaning | ‘There's not any good reason for me to go on living. Nobody really needs me… I'm really not serving any purpose. If you don't, aren't needed by anybody, you kind of have a different feeling about life’ | Psychosocial factors (useless, boredom, burden, lack of enjoyment in life) motivating the serious consideration of a hastened death. |
| ‘I'm just saying to myself when I go to sleep, ‘Just let me die.’ I don't want to have to wake up and face this… honestly I just pray that I would just die in my sleep. I have nothing to live for, absolutely nothing. There's nothing coming up in my life that I am living towards, and if there was it would be so terrible because it probably wouldn't happen’ | Desire to hasten death as an expression of despair. | |
| ‘One daughter explains about her mother: “The things that were meaningful to [my mother] in her life were her art, her ability to do her art and her friends, and spending time with her friends and cooking and eating. And she was…very convinced that when she couldn't do any of those things anymore, her life would be meaningless, and she wouldn't want to live anymore’ | Loss of function. | |
| ‘There's not any good reason for me to go on living. Nobody really needs me… I'm really not serving any purpose. If you don't, aren't needed by anybody, you kind of have a different feeling about life’ | Psychosocial factors (useless, boredom, burden, lack of enjoyment in life) motivating the serious consideration of a hastened death. | |
| ‘I'm just saying to myself when I go to sleep, ‘Just let me die.’ I don't want to have to wake up and face this… honestly I just pray that I would just die in my sleep. I have nothing to live for, absolutely nothing. There's nothing coming up in my life that I am living towards, and if there was it would be so terrible because it probably wouldn't happen’ | Desire to hasten death as an expression of despair. | |
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| – Fear of dying process | ‘It'll be extremely terrible. It'll be coming up from there, just everywhere. I mean the complications and that would give me so much pain and suffering. I anticipate the future would be like this. Very severe, very scary when I think about it’ | Anticipation of a future worse than death itself. |
| ‘I, I fear some of the, uh, some of the physical stress that may come in the course of my dying. Nobody chooses to die little by little. At least, I can't visualize that’ | Factors motivating the serious consideration of a hastened death. | |
| ‘I can't bear the dying process so I'll short circuit it by dying’ | The dying process itself was so difficult that an early death was preferred. | |
| ‘I don't want to go through the dying process so I'll kill myself’ | ||
| ‘It'll be extremely terrible. It'll be coming up from there, just everywhere. I mean the complications and that would give me so much pain and suffering. I anticipate the future would be like this. Very severe, very scary when I think about it’ | Anticipation of a future worse than death itself. | |
| – Fear of imminent death | ‘Not much hope, nor would there be any miracles…You doctors can't help when the patients deteriorate and then drop dead…’ | Reality of disease progression. |
| ‘This sort of disease ultimately leads to death. I have to walk that path’ | ||
| ‘I haven't been in hospital before. I wouldn't know the facts. I haven't been ill before’ | Anticipation of a future worse than death itself. | |
| ‘…the end of many dreams for, plans, complete halt to things I was doing, want to do. The biggest thing is the weakness, which I absolutely hate, not being able to do things, to realise that this is virtually the end of it all. There's no future really. You can't plan anything’ | Impact on the patient. | |
| ‘Not much hope, nor would there be any miracles…You doctors can't help when the patients deteriorate and then drop dead…’ | Reality of disease progression. | |
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| ‘The goal is now to die. …I'm using my flexibility not to devote my time toward how I am going to die and praying, etc… I'm using my flexibility in time management to do things that the living do, not the dying’ | A manifestation of the will to live. | |
| ‘Wish to live but can't live; wish to die but can't die’ | Perception of suffering for self. | |
| ‘See, there's a problem while planning or pursuing your death… On the one hand, I am saying all these things, and, on the other hand, I am going down for radiation¡ | A manifestation of the will to live. | |
| ‘I've experienced such incredible pain over the last little while and more in the last week. Such incredible pain that it made me think that death is preferable to this…I'll sit there for 2 hours in terrible pain. Such pain where I can't yawn even, and I get only half a yawn and my whole insides turn and waiting for the medication to start to work… I'd love to have 48 h let's say, I'd love to have this weekend where I could plan to have a nice weekend and have no pain. I'd love to do that and it doesn't happen, and the pain affects everything. It makes you tired. It affects how you can eat. It affects your mood. It affects other people, and the fact is that even if you try to hide it, you can't… So that's hard…and I know it's gonna get worse, so that's hard too. It's great to be alive, and pain takes that life out of you, and to sit there for 2 hours with a blanket around your just shivering, with no solution, is really hard’ | Desire to hasten death as an expression of despair. | |
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| ‘I can't bear the dying process so I'll short circuit it by dying’ | The dying process itself was so difficult that an early death was preferred. | |
| ‘I feel, deep inside, I don't want to feel hurting… that I want to end this… I ask God why he don't take me, why I suffer so much’ | The immediate situation was unendurable and required instant action. | |
| ‘In a sense it's artificial that I'm still alive. Even a few years ago that would not have been the case for me to survive that long, but there are limits to what any organism will take or can do, and I have reached my limit’ | Desire to hasten death as a manifestation of letting go. | |
| ‘Pain is my biggest fear. It puts me in a darkness and a lack of will to go forward and a desire to die… The pain wants me to have vehicle to just, just stop my life’ | A hastened death was an option to extract oneself from an unendurable situation. | |
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| ‘If I had to go through [an episode of acute shortness of breath] again, I would throw myself in front of a subway train. I am not going through that again’ | A manifestation of the last control the dying person can exert. | |
| ‘If the pain gets worse, then I want to be dead’ | A hastened death was an option to extract oneself from an unendurable situation. | |
| ‘I just feel sometimes as though cancer is, uh, an opponent. And, it seems to me, it says to itself, ‘I am in control of this body. This is mine, I will do whatever I want to with it’” | Sense of control; ultimate control through physician-assisted death. |
Characteristics of included studies in the review.
| Source paper | Country setting | Participants | Research Design | Data collection | Setting | Sampling | Data collection |
| Lavery | Ontario, Canada | 31 men and 1 woman with HIV or AIDS | Grounded Theory | In depth interviews | HIV Ontario Observational Database (HOOD), which is a provincial epidemiological database. | Purposive sampling. | October 1996 to september 1997 |
| Kelly | Brisbane, Australia | 30 terminally ill cancer patients, who endorsed some wish to hasten death | Mixed-Methods Study. Qualitative method: Descriptive qualitative study | Quantitative scale and Semi-structured interviews | Inpatient hospice unit and home palliative care service | Purposive sampling | Between 1998 and 2000 |
| Coyle & Sculco 2004 | New York, USA | 7 terminally ill cancer patients that expressed to desire to hasten death | Phenomenology | In depth interviews | Pain and palliative care unit in an urban center cancer research | Purposive sampling | 1–6 interviews to each patient in 6 months |
| Mak & Elwyn 2005 | Hong Kong, China | 6 patients that requested to hasten death | Hermeneutic Phenomenology | In depth interviews | Palliative care unit consisted of a 26-bedded hospice in China. This unit followed the UK model of palliative care with a multi-disciplinary team | Purposive sampling: theoretical | 4 months period in 2000 |
| Pearlman | Seattle, USA | 35 patients who seriously pursued a hastened death | Descriptive qualitative study | Semi-structured interviews | Patient advocacy organizations that counsel persons interested in PAS, hospices and grief counselors | Purposive sampling | April 1997 to march 2001 |
| Schroepfer 2006 | Wisconsin, USA | 18 terminally ill elders (50 or more years old) who desire to hasten death | Content analysis; inductive method in locating themes and patterns | Face-to-face interviews | 2 palliative care programs, 2 hospital outpatient clinics and 6 hospices | Purposive sample | Not specify |
| Nissim | Toronto, Canada | 27 ambulatory patients with advanced lung or gastrointestinal cancer | Grounded Theory | Semi-structured interviews and discovery- oriented | Outpatient clinics at a large cancer center in Toronto | Theoretical Sampling | March 2003 to November 2006 |
Themes identified in each study.
| Themes/– Categories | Study Reference | ||||||
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| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
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| – Loss of Function | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| – Loss of Control | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| – Sense of “Loss of dignity” | -- | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | -- |
| – Loss of Meaning | Yes | Yes | -- | -- | Yes | Yes | Yes |
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| – Fear to dying process | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| – Fear to imminent death | Yes | Yes | -- | Yes | -- | -- | Yes |
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| -- | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
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| Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
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| -- | Yes | Yes | -- | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Figure 3Line of argument: Explanatory model of WTHD.