| Literature DB >> 25844066 |
George Fitchett1, Linda Emanuel2, George Handzo3, Lara Boyken2, Diana J Wilkie4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dignity Therapy (DT), an intervention for people facing serious illness, focuses on dignity conservation tasks such as settling relationships, sharing words of love, and preparing a legacy document for loved ones. Research on DT began more than a decade ago and has been conducted in 7 countries, but a systematic review of DT research has not been published.Entities:
Keywords: Dignity therapy; End-of-Life care; Literature review; Spiritual care
Year: 2015 PMID: 25844066 PMCID: PMC4384229 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-015-0007-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Figure 1Flow diagram of systematic review process.
Dignity therapy studies
| Study | Sample | Design | Measures | Findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Passik et al., 2004 [ | US sample; 8 pts with cancer in hospice care | Single group pre-post trial of DT via telemedicine | • ZSDS | DT is feasible by telemedicine/ videoconference. |
| • PUBs | ||||
| • Single item scale for depression | ||||
| Assessments: Baseline & immediate post DT | ||||
| Evaluation | ||||
| Satisfaction survey | ||||
| Chochinov et al., 2005 [ | Canada and Australia sample | Single group, pre-post trial of DT | Single item screening measures for: | Significant improvement in: suffering (p = .023), depressive symptoms (p = .05). |
| • Depression | ||||
| 100 terminally ill pts in hospital, NH or home | Assessments: Baseline & immediate post DT | • Dignity | ||
| • Anxiety | High proportions gave positive evaluation for benefits of DT: 91% reported feeling satisfied/ highly satisfied with DT. | |||
| • Suffering | ||||
| • Hopefulness | ||||
| • Desire for death | ||||
| 86% reported DT was helpful or very helpful. | ||||
| • Suicide | ||||
| • Sense of well-being | 81% indicated DT had already helped, or would help, their family. | |||
| QoL – 2 items | ||||
| ESAS (revised) | 76% indicated DT heightened their sense of dignity. | |||
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| DTPFQ | 47% indicated DT increased their will to live. | |||
| Akechi et al., 2012 [ | Japanese sample; | Two trials of DT feasibility, no control |
| Major problems with recruitment in Study 1 but not Study 2. The authors raise concern about acceptability of DT in Japanese culture. |
| DTPFQ– 9 items | ||||
| 11 pts with advanced cancer in hospice and hospital pall care unit | Assessment: No schedule of assessment reported | |||
| Overall positive evaluation of DT: 67% indicated DT heightened their sense of dignity, 56% indicated DT was beneficial, 78% indicated DT had already helped, or would help, their family. | ||||
| Chochinov et al., 2012 [ | Canadian sample; | Single group trial of DT |
| Cognitively intact: reports helpful and satisfactory, but no specification of benefits around meaning, purpose, dignity. |
| DTPFQ– 9 items | ||||
| Assessment: 2–3 days post DT | ||||
| 12 cognitively intact and 11 cognitively impaired frail elderly in long-term care | ||||
| Cognitively impaired: proxy participants (family members) indicated DT is helpful to them and their families. | ||||
| Johns 2013 [ | US sample; 10 pts with metastatic cancer from community or outpatient oncology unit | Single group trial of DT | • 7-item cancer distress measure | 4 completers (3 declined to finish, 3 deaths); sample size too small for statistical analyses. |
| • BDI | ||||
| Assessment: Baseline & f/u 1 shortly post DT, f/u 2 within 1 month | • FACIT-PAL | |||
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| Feasibility and acceptability reported from surviving participants. | |||
| DTPFQ | ||||
| Bentley et al., 2014 [ | Australian sample; | Single group pre-post trial of DT | • PDI | Feasibility and acceptability established. |
| • FACIT-SP | High rating of satisfaction (93%) and helpfulness (89%) for DT. | |||
| 29 pts diagnosed with motor neurone disease living in community | Assessment: |
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| Baseline, f/u | • DTPFQ | |||
| 1 wk post DT | ||||
| • 3 additional single-item measures of hopefulness & family support. | No significant changes in hope, spirituality or dignity. | |||
| Houmann et al., 2014 [ | Danish sample; 80 pts w incurable ca from hospice and hospital pall care unit | Single group pre-post trial of DT | • SISC - 6 items | No change on any measure at f/u 1 or f/u 2 except QoL decreased baseline to f/u 1. |
| • PDI | ||||
| • Quality of life: EORTC QLQ-C15- | ||||
| Assessment: | At f/u 1 and f/u 2 positive responses on DTPFQ. | |||
| Baseline, f/u 1 immediately after receiving generativity document (median 36 days post DT), f/u 2 1 mo after DT (median 60 days) | • PAL | |||
| • HADS | Issues w recruitment (~50%) | |||
| • Palliative | Issues w retention f/u 1 69%, f/u 2 39%. | |||
| • Performance scale ver2 (PPSv2) | ||||
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| Issues with floor effects (30%-70% no sx on SISC/PDI). | |||
| DTPFQ– 9 items | ||||
| Subgroup analysis for each SISC/PDI item using those with some sx found some improvement for selected items. | ||||
| Vergo et al., 2014 [ | US sample; | Single group pre-post trial of DT | • TIA | DTPFQ indicates DT very acceptable; increase in death acceptance over time (11% at baseline vs. 57% at f/u 2). |
| 15 pts with stage-IV colorectal cancer receiving palliative chemotherapy | • Distress Thermometer | |||
| Assessment: | ||||
| • ESAS | ||||
| Baseline, f/u 1 | • 2-item QOL | |||
| 2–3 weeks post-DT, f/u 2 | • H-CAP-S | |||
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| DTPFQ – 5 items | ||||
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| Chochinov et al., 2011 [ | Canada, Australian, & US sample | 3 arm RCT: DT vs client-centered care vs standard care | Outcomes | No significant differences on any of the outcomes. |
| • Structured Interview for Symptoms and Concerns (SISC): 7 items | ||||
| Pts in the DT group had higher scores than the other grps on 8 of 22 evaluation items. | ||||
| 441 pts receiving palliative care in hospital, hospice or home | ||||
| Assessment: | ||||
| • Edmonton Sx – 8 items | Issues with recruitment, retention, floor effects. | |||
| • Quality of life: 2 items | ||||
| Baseline & f/u immediately post receiving generativity document | • HADS | |||
| • FACIT-Sp | ||||
| PDI | ||||
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| DTPFQ– 22 items | ||||
| Hall et al., 2011 [ | UK sample | Design RCT (Phase II trial for acceptability, estimates of effect sizes): Tx = DT plus usual care; Control = usual care | Primary: | No differences on PDI. |
| • PDI | ||||
| No differences for any secondary outcomes, except higher hope in DT grp at f/u 1 (p = .02). | ||||
| 45 pts with advanced cancer | Secondary: | |||
| • Hope | ||||
| • HADS | ||||
| • EQ-5D | Patients in the DT group had higher scores on DTPFQ, some significant. | |||
| Assessment: | • palliative-related outcomes (Hearn) | |||
| DTPFQ | ||||
| Baseline, f/u 1 1 week post DT, f/u 2 4 wks post-DT. | ||||
| Hall et al., 2012 [ | UK sample | Design RCT (Phase II trial for potential effectiveness, feasibility): Tx = DT plus usual care; Control = usual care | Primary: | No significant differences on effectiveness measures at any point; reduced dignity-related distress as measured by DTPFQ across both groups (p = 0.026). |
| 64 pts in older care homes | • PDI | |||
| Secondary: | ||||
| • GDS | ||||
| • HHI | ||||
| • EQ-5D | ||||
| Acceptability: | Patients in the DT group significantly more likely to feel DT had made life more meaningful at f/u 1 (p = 0.04). | |||
| • DTPFQ | ||||
| Assessment: | ||||
| Baseline, f/u 1 7 days post-DT, f/u 2 8 wks post-DT | ||||
| Juliao et al., 2014 [ | Portuguese sample | Design RCT: Tx = DT+ usual care; Control = usual care | HADS | DT associated with lower depression at f/u 1 and 2 (p < 0.0001) and lower anxiety at f/u 1, 2 and 3 (p < 0.0001). |
| 60 terminally ill pts | ||||
| Assessment: | ||||
| Baseline, f/u 1 4 days post-DT, f/u 2 15 days post-DT, f/u 3 30 days post-DT | ||||
BDI = Beck Depression Index; DTPFQ = DT Patient Feedback Questionnaire; EORTCQLQ-C15-PAL = European Organization for Research in Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire; EQ-5D = EuroQol; ESAS = Edmonton System Assessment Scale; FACIT-SP = Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy - Spiritual Well-Being; FACIT-PAL = Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy – Palliative Care; GDS = Geriatric Depression Scale; HADS = Hospital Anxiety Depression Scale; H-CAP-S = Hypothetical Advanced Care Planning Scenario; HHI = Herth Hope Index; NH = nursing home; PDI = Personal Dignity Inventory; PPSv2 = Palliative Performance Scale; PUBs = Purposelessness, Understimulation and Boredom scale; QoL – 2 = Quality of Life; SISC = Structured Interview for Symptoms and Concerns; TIA = Terminal Illness Acknowledgement; ZSDS = Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale.
Qualitative studies of dignity therapy
| Study | Sample | Methods | Main study finding |
|---|---|---|---|
| Hack et al., 2010 [ | 50 edited DT transcripts (17 Canadian and 33 Australian) from patients with terminal illness in inpatient palliative care programs, sample from Chochinov et al., 2005 [ | Content analysis, constant comparative analysis of completed DT legacy document by three investigators | • Throughout DT interview patients reflect on two to three personally meaningful core values, such as ‘family’, ‘pleasure’, ‘caring’, and ‘sense of accomplishment’. |
| • DT is used by patients to confirm personal identity. | |||
| • Investigators suggest more theoretical analysis of “meaning-making” construct in end-of-life care needed. | |||
| Tait et al., 2011 [ | 12 Canadian patients with terminal illness in inpatient palliative care | Constant comparative analysis of DT interviews | • Three main ‘types of interviews’ emerge: ‘Evaluation narratives’, focusing on life prior to illness; ‘transition narratives’, focusing on change in health status and its meaning; ‘legacy narratives’, focusing on future without the patient. |
| • Investigators suggest narrative themes share commonality with medical interview and eulogy genres. | |||
| Montross et al., 2011 [ | 27 US community-based hospice patients | Coding consensus, co-occurrence, and comparison analysis of DT legacy documents | • Similar findings to Hack et al., 2010 [ |
| • DT is feasible in a community-based setting. | |||
| Hall et al., 2013 [ | 49 UK pts in older care homes, sample from Hall et al., 2012 [ | Framework analysis of qualitative interviews conducted at T1 and T2; interviews on resident views of DT and/or being a study participant (control group). | • Of 9 themes, 3 were unique to intervention group: ‘views of legacy document’; ‘generativity’; and ‘reminiscence’. |
| • DT not recommended by investigators, in current form, with participants with cognitive impairment: findings suggest DT document may reflect ‘distorted sense of self’ and prompt distress. | |||
| Hall et al., 2013 [ | 29 UK pts with advanced cancer, sample from Hall et al., 2011 [ | Framework analysis of qualitative interviews conducted at T1 and T2; interviews on pt views of DT and/or being a study participant (control group). | • 5 of 7 themes in Dignity Model theory present in both interviews groups; ‘generativity’ found only in intervention group. |
| • No evidence of ‘role preservation’ as described in Dignity Model in this sample. | |||
| • Qualitative interview reporting of higher levels of hopefulness in both groups from participating in study, despite no change in quantitative component of study. |
Case reports of dignity therapy use
| Study | Sample | Implementation | Discussion |
|---|---|---|---|
| Avery & Savitz, 2011 [ | US patient with schizoaffective disorder in inpatient psychiatric unit | DT protocol questions used by patient to write life story, prompted by worries of not spending time with family because of illness. Investigator typed and edited narrative and discussed with patient. | • Patient reported that narrative had ‘restored hope’ to him. Patient shared copies of document with loved ones. |
| • Investigators note DT could be beneficial for pts with chronic mental illness, “improving patient narratives”. | |||
| Avery & Baez, 2012 [ | US patient with major depressive disorder in inpatient setting | DT protocol used by investigator to aid patient in ‘gaining fresh perspective’ after severe depression following loss of job. | • Patient reported DT aided her in ‘finding hope’, and improved her mood. |
| • Investigator notes use of DT to make sense of major life event and loss. | |||
| • Investigator posits DT legacy document may be supportive to family members of patients with chronic mental illness. | |||
| Hall et al., 2013 [ | 3 UK patients with advanced cancer in high distress, sample from Hall et al., 2011 [ | Focus on ‘dignity-related problems’ expressed by patients, qualitative review of DT legacy documents. | • Investigators note DT administered in a context of complex and quickly changing circumstances. |
| • Distressed patients may find focus on ‘overarching truths, feelings and insights’ as indicated in DT protocol very difficult. | |||
| • DT therapeutic relationship is challenging with patients who are distressed given short time-frame of interaction. |