| Literature DB >> 29736869 |
George Muishout1, Hanneke W M van Laarhoven2, Gerard Wiegers3, Ulrike Popp-Baier3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Muslim norms concerning palliative sedation can differ from secular and non-Muslim perceptions. Muslim physicians working in a Western environment are expected to administer palliative sedation when medically indicated. Therefore, they can experience tension between religious and medical norms.Entities:
Keywords: End of life; Intercultural care; Islam; Muslim physicians; Palliative sedation
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29736869 PMCID: PMC6182360 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-018-4229-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.603
Participant characteristics
| Anonymous name | Birth year | Sex | Type of physician | Ethnic background |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yusuf | 1977 | Male | Trainee general practitioner | Moroccan |
| Talha | 1985 | Male | General practitioner | Moroccan |
| Omar | 1984 | Male | Trainee neurologist | Moroccan |
| Anwar | 1983 | Male | Trainee internist | Turkish |
| Amin | 1959 | Male | Geriatrician | Afghan |
| Khalid | 1974 | Male | Anaesthetist | Moroccan |
| Farid | 1980 | Male | Acute medicine specialist | Moroccan |
| Nabila | 1977 | Female | General practitioner | Moroccan |
| Muhammad | 1970 | Male | General practitioner | Turkish |
| Khadidja | 1982 | Female | Trainee internist | Moroccan |
Participants are listed by chronology of the interview date
Example of the interview questions
| Personal information/background | |
| Year of birth | |
| Sex | |
| Medical education | |
| Motivation to study medicine | |
| Current employment | |
| Professional experience | |
| Main questions | |
| 1. Would you like to think of a case in which palliative sedation was used? | |
| 2. What was (in this case) the reason to commence sedation? | |
| 3. How was the decision to sedate made? ... ..Who were involved? ...... What was the response? | |
| 4. Can you tell me how you communicated the suggestion for palliative sedation? Who were involved (present)? | |
| 5. What was the response to your suggestion to switch to palliative sedation (patient / family)? | |
| 6. Can you describe its course (until death?) | |
| 7. How did those who were closely involved with the patient (family, relatives, etc.) respond? | |
| 8. Can you tell me about the contact with those involved after the patient died? | |
| *(Questions 1 to 8 can be applied to multiple cases.) | |
| Palliative sedation and good death | |
| 9. What do you see as the objective of palliative sedation? | |
| 10. What do you mean by a good death ... for a patient ...for his / her family (for yourself)? | |
| 11. What do you feel about pain relief (in the form of medication) at the end of life? (Would you use it yourself if you were a patient ... based on what considerations.) | |
| 12. How do you think the application of pain management relates to a good death, and what part does palliative sedation play? | |
| 13. What, in your opinion, does the use of palliative sedation at the end of life mean for the ‘quality’ of life? | |
| Religious background | |
| 14. In what kind of religious environment did you grow up (home & environment)? | |
| 15. Do you consider yourself a Muslim? Can you tell me something about that? | |
| 16. May I ask if you consider yourself to belong to a certain branch of Islam? | |
| 17. What is the current role and meaning of your religion in your daily life? | |
| 18. What is the significance of religion in your professional life (as a physician)? | |
| 19. Do you think your beliefs play a role in the considerations and choices you make as a professional? | |
| 20. What do the pronouncements of imams or Islamic scholars mean to you? | |
| 21. Are there any of pronouncements about palliative sedation to guide you? | |
| Are there things you find important to say but have not been addressed? |
Overview of theme 1, including quotations 1 up to 9
| Super-ordinate theme | Subtheme | Quote |
|---|---|---|
| I: professional self-concept | ||
| Primacy of individual moral decision as a physician | 1: ‘However, an Imam or Islamic scholar cannot simply dictate to me what I should do, because a physician is personally responsible for his own, Islamically as well right? Because you take action as you see fit’. (Yusuf) | |
| Alleviating suffering as moral duty | 5: ‘Yes and if a patient is truly suffering physically, this is obvious from the state he is in, from his facial expressions, and then, of course, you have to do something about it’. (Farid). | |
| Pain relief as professional medical task | 8: ‘Well then, as I have already said, giving a patient pain relief is part and parcel of your duties as a physician’. (Khalid) | |
Overview of theme 2, including quotations 10 up to 28
| Super-ordinate theme | Subtheme | Quote |
|---|---|---|
| II: attitudes towards death and dying | ||
| II a: Islamic perspectives on a good death and the dying process | Importance of awareness | 10: ‘(…) that a person can’t perform his prayers, yes that is also an argument. How should you tackle this situation? As physician you are the one in the position of responsibility. Because you have unnecessarily lowered the state of someone’s consciousness’. (Yusuf) |
| Expiation of sins through suffering | 14: ‘What they have said to me is that suffering at this stage, that is very important. Because it can work as an act of atonement for the sins you have committed throughout your life. And, when it’s all said and done, this is indeed an argument: to endure this now is good for him because he has a chance of going to Heaven, to Janna (Paradise, GM)’. (Omar) | |
| Medical intervention until death | 17: ‘They wanted to do everything that could be done. Saying then: Allah decides whether he lives or dies from this. And if you have said: If we operate and he dies all the same, youhave done your best but Allah had decided not the physician, not a human being (…) and had we not allowed this chance it would be tantamount to murder’. (Omar) | |
| Giving the patient a chance | 20: ‘I think that everybody deserves a chance. I’ve sent someone who is ninety to intensive care because I didn’t think that his case was hopeless’. (Anwar) | |
| II b: palliative sedation in relation to Islamic perspectives on a good death | Palliative sedation as possibly life-shortening | 22: ‘Often, after I had given an injection I have had to pronounce life extinct. The thought frequently crossed my mind: well that’s a bit too much of a coincidence. Then I felt a little awkward, I’ve thought: have I really not been doing something wrong?’ (Nabila) |
| Proportionate use of palliative sedation | 25: ‘I think that you have to adjust this discreetly. You must always be aware of what you are doing. In other words, that you do not overshoot the mark’. (Khalid) | |
| Palliative sedation versus cause of death | 27: ‘But in the eyes of many other people and if one is realistic one can understand their point of view, someone does not eat, does not drink’. (Amin) | |