| Literature DB >> 29673342 |
Samia A Hurst1, Ueli Zellweger2, Georg Bosshard3, Matthias Bopp4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: End-of-life decisions remain controversial. Switzerland, with three main languages shared with surrounding countries and legal suicide assistance, allows exploration of the effects of cultural differences on end-of-life practices within the same legal framework.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29673342 PMCID: PMC5909244 DOI: 10.1186/s12916-018-1043-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Prevalence of medical end-of-life practicesa in Switzerland 2013, by language region
| Regions | German-speaking | French-speaking | Italian-speaking | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of non-sudden expected deaths (eligible for end-of-life decision) | ||||||
| %b | 95% CI | %b | 95% CI | %b | 95% CI | |
| No end-of-life practice | 17.7% | (16.2–19.3) | 25.0% | (22.4–27.9) | 26.0% | (22.0–30.3) |
| Forgoing life-prolonging treatment | 49.4% | (47.3–51.4) | 31.6% | (28.8–34.6) | 34.8% | (30.4–39.5) |
| - taking into account hastening of deathc | 6.4% | (5.4–7.5) | 5.2% | (4.0–6.7) | 4.7% | (3.0–7.1) |
| - intending hastening of deathd | 43.0% | (40.9–45.0) | 26.5% | (23.8–29.3) | 30.1% | (26–34.7) |
| Intensified alleviation of pain/symptoms | 29.8% | (28.0–31.7) | 39.8% | (36.8–42.9) | 37.4% | (33.0–42.1) |
| - taking into account hastening of deathe | 26.9% | (25.1–28.8) | 36.6% | (33.7–39.7) | 33.8% | (29.5–38.4) |
| - partly intending hastening of deathf | 2.9% | (2.3–3.7) | 3.2% | (2.3–4.5) | 3.6% | (2.2–5.8) |
| Physician-assisted death | 3.1% | (2.5–3.9) | 3.5% | (2.5–4.8) | 1.8% | (0.9–3.6) |
| - Assisted suicideg | 1.6% | (1.1–2.2) | 1.2% | (0.6–2.1) | – | |
| - Euthanasiah | 0.5% | (0.3–0.9) | 0.5% | (0.2–1.2) | 0.5% | (0.1–1.8) |
| - Ending of life without the patient’s explicit requesti | 1.1% | (0.8–1.6) | 1.9% | (1.2–2.9) | 1.4% | (0.6–3.0) |
aIf several practices were combined, the most explicit action was decisive; e.g., combinations of physician-assisted death with forgoing life-prolonging treatments or intensified alleviation of pain and symptoms were categorized under physician-assisted death
b100% = all non-sudden expected deaths; percentages weighted to region-sex-age-specific response rates
cAffirmative answer to the question, “Did you or another physician withhold or withdraw a medical treatment while taking into account the possible hastening of death?”
dAffirmative answer to the question, “Did you or another physician withhold or withdraw a medical treatment with the intention to hasten death?”
eAffirmative answer to the question, “Did you or another physician intensify the alleviation of pain and/or symptoms while taking into account the possible hastening of death?”
fAffirmative answer to the question, “Did you or another physician intensify the alleviation of pain and/or symptoms partly with the intention to hasten death?”
gAffirmative answer to the question, “Was death the consequence of the use of a drug that was prescribed or supplied by you or another physician with the explicit intention of enabling the patient to end his or her life?”
hAffirmative answer to the question, “Was death the consequence of the use of a drug that was prescribed or supplied by you or another physician with the explicit intention of hastening the patient’s death?” AND affirmative answer to the question: “Was this decision made at the explicit request of the patient?”
iAffirmative answer to the question, “Was death the consequence of the use of a drug that was prescribed or supplied by you or another physician with the explicit intention of hastening the patient’s death?” AND no affirmative answer to the question: “Was this decision made at the explicit request of the patient?”
Forgoing life-prolonging treatment and intensified alleviation of pain and symptoms, Switzerland 2013, by language region
| Regions | German-speaking | French-speaking | Italian-speaking | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of non-sudden expected deaths (eligible for end-of-life decision) | ||||||
| %a | 95% CI | %a | 95% CI | %a | 95% CI | |
| Forgoing life-prolonging treatment | ||||||
| Total | 70.0% | (68.1–71.9) | 59.8% | (56.7–62.8) | 57.4% | (52.7–62.0) |
| - taking into account hastening of death | 25.8% | (24.0–27.6) | 32.1% | (29.3–35.1) | 25.7% | (21.8–30.1) |
| - intending hastening of death | 44.2% | (42.2–46.3) | 27.7% | (25.0–30.6) | 31.7% | (27.5–36.3) |
| - not combined with other medical end-of-life practice (1) | 17.3% | (15.8–18.9) | 12.5% | (10.6–14.7) | 10.2% | (7.7–13.5) |
| - combined with intensified alleviation of pain/symptoms only | 51.2% | (49.1–53.2) | 45.0% | (41.9–48.1) | 45.4% | (40.7–50.1) |
| - ditto, only intended forgoing treatment (2) | 32.0% | (30.1–34.0) | 19.2% | (16.8–21.7) | 24.6% | (20.7–28.9) |
| - combined with physician-assisted death | 1.5% | (0.1–2.1) | 2.3% | (1.5–3.5) | 1.8% | (0.9–3.6) |
| Intensified alleviation of pain/symptoms | ||||||
| Total | 63.4% | (61.4–65.3) | 61.4% | (58.3–64.4) | 63.8% | (59.1–68.2) |
| - taking into account hastening of death | 51.7% | (49.7–53.8) | 53.8% | (50.7–56.9) | 48.8% | (44.1–53.5) |
| - partly intending hastening of death | 11.6% | (10.4–13.0) | 7.6% | (6.1–9.4) | 15.0% | (11.9–18.8) |
| - not combined with other medical end-of-life practice (3) | 10.7% | (9.5–12.0) | 14.0% | (12.0–16.4) | 16.6% | (13.4–20.5) |
| - combined with forgoing life-prolonging treatment only | 51.2% | (49.1–53.2) | 45.0% | (41.9–48.1) | 45.4% | (40.7–50.1) |
| - ditto, only non-intended forgoing treatment (4) | 19.1% | (17.6–20.8) | 25.8% | (23.2–28.7) | 20.8% | (17.2–24.9) |
| - combined with physician-assisted death | 1.5% | (0.1–2.1) | 24.0% | (1.6–3.6) | 1.8% | (0.9–3.6) |
a100% = all non-sudden expected deaths; percentages weighted to region-sex-age-specific response rates
Data in this table include cases in which more than one end-of-life decision were taken
Forgoing life-prolonging treatment as most explicit end-of-life decision (cf. Table 1): (1) + (2)
Intensified alleviation of pain/symptoms as most explicit end-of-life decision (cf. Table 1): (3) + (4)
Continuous deep sedation in Switzerland 2013, by language region
| Regions | German-speaking | French-speaking | Italian-speaking | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-sudden expected deaths | ||||||
| %a | 95% CI | %a | 95% CI | %a | 95% CI | |
| Continuous deep sedation until death (CDS) | 24.5% | (22.3–26.3) | 26.9% | (24.2–29.7) | 34.4% | (30.1–39.0) |
| - CDS without end-of-life decision | 1.6% | (1.2–2.2) | 3.2% | (2.2–4.5) | 5.1% | (3.4–7.6) |
| - CDS combined with end-of-life decision | 22.8% | (21.1–25.6) | 23.7% | (21.2–26.5) | 29.3% | (25.2–33.8) |
a100% = all non-sudden expected deaths; percentages weighted to region-sex-age-specific response rates
Prevalence of medical end-of-life practices, Switzerland 2013, by language region and place of death
| Regions | German-speaking | French-speaking | Italian-speaking | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of non-sudden expected deaths (eligible for end-of-life decision) | ||||||
| %a | 95% CI | %a | 95% CI | %a | 95% CI | |
| At home | ||||||
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| No end-of-life practice | 25.8 | (20.9–31.4) | 24.6 | (17.0–34.2) | 31.1 | (21.1–43.2) |
| Forgoing treatment total | 60.3 | (54.2–66.0) | 47.0 | (37.2–57.1) | 45.8 | (34.2–57.8) |
| Alleviation of pain & symptoms total | 53.1 | (47.1–59.1) | 60.2 | (50.0–69.6) | 63.1 | (51.0–73.8) |
| vPhysician-assisted death total | 5.7 | (3.5–9.2) | 15.4 | (9.3–24.4) | 1.6 | (0.2–10.5) |
| - Assisted suicide | 4.2 | (2.3–7.5) | 9.0 | (4.6–17.0) | – | |
| In long-term care homes | ||||||
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| No end-of-life practice | 17.6 | (15.3–20.1) | 23.9 | (19.8–28.5) | 27.1 | (21.2–34.0) |
| Forgoing treatment total | 71.5 | (68.6–74.3) | 59.1 | (53.9–64.0) | 54.8 | (47.6–61.8) |
| Alleviation of pain and symptoms total | 62.7 | (59.6–65.7) | 63.2 | (58.2–68.0) | 63.1 | (55.9–69.8) |
| Physician-assisted death total | 1.2 | (0.7–2.2) | 3.0 | (1.7–5.4) | 3.1 | (1.4–6.8) |
| - Assisted suicide | 0.1 | (0.0–0.8) | 0.3 | (0.0–2.0) | – | |
| In hospital | ||||||
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| No end-of-life practice | 15.7 | (13.5–18.1) | 26.0 | (22.4–30.0) | 22.7 | (17.0–29.5) |
| Forgoing treatment total | 73.6 | (70.4–75.9) | 62.6 | (58.4–66.7) | 64.5 | (57.1–71.3) |
| Alleviation of pain and symptoms total | 68.8 | (65.8–71.6) | 60.2 | (55.9–64.4) | 65.9 | (58.6–72.6) |
| Physician-assisted death total | 2.0 | (1.3–3.1) | 1.7 | (0.9–3.2) | 0.5 | (0.1–3.8) |
| - Assisted suicide | – | 0.4 | (0.1–1.4) | – | ||
a100% = all non-sudden expected deaths; percentages weighted to region-sex-age-specific response rates
Data in this table include cases in which more than one end-of-life decision were taken
Discussion of medical end-of-life decisionsa in function of the patient’s decision-making capacity, Switzerland 2013, by language region
| Regions | German-speaking | French-speaking | Italian-speaking | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Deaths with end-of-life practice mentioned (eligible for involvement) | ||||||
| %b | 95% CI | %b | 95% CI | %b | 95% CI | |
| Discussed with patient | 35.6% | (33.4–37.5) | 31.2% | (27.9–34.6) | 16.0% | (12.4–20.4) |
| Patient fully capable | 73.3% | (69.6–76.6) | 71.2% | (65.3–76.5) | 60.0% | (47.2–71.6) |
| Patient not fully capable | 37.1% | (32.3–42.3) | 30.3% | (22.9–38.8) | 8.4% | (3.8–17.6) |
| Patient not capable at all | 9.7% | (7.6–12.2) | 5.8% | (3.4–9.6) | 6.9% | (3.6–12.8) |
| Patient’s capacity unknown | 3.4% | (1.7–6.7) | – | – | ||
| Discussed with patient and/or relatives and/or patient ever expressed wish | 76.5% | (74.5–78.4) | 73.8% | (70.5–76.9) | 69.0% | (63.7–73.8) |
| Patient fully capable | 87.8% | (85.0–90.2) | 88.5% | (84.0–91.9) | 87.4% | (76.5–93.6) |
| Patient not fully capable | 85.3% | (81.2–88.6) | 82.9% | (75.3–88.5) | 75.6% | (64.4–84.1) |
| Patient not capable at all | 79.8% | (76.5–82.7) | 82.2% | (76.6–86.6) | 82.8% | (75.3–88.4) |
| Patient’s capacity unknown | 22.1% | (17.2–28.0) | 20.4% | (14.2–28.4) | 13.1% | (6.6–24.2) |
aCDS is not a MELD and is thus not included in this table
b100% = all deaths with reported end-of-life practice; percentages weighted to region-sex-age-specific response rates