| Literature DB >> 29843682 |
Reetta P Piili1,2, Riina Metsänoja3, Heikki Hinkka4, Pirkko-Liisa I Kellokumpu-Lehtinen5,6, Juho T Lehto5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The ethics of hastened death are complex. Studies on physicians' opinions about assisted dying (euthanasia or assisted suicide) exist, but changes in physicians' attitudes towards hastened death in clinical decision-making and the background factors explaining this remain unclear. The aim of this study was to explore the changes in these attitudes among Finnish physicians.Entities:
Keywords: Clinical ethics; Decision-making; End-of-life care; Euthanasia
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29843682 PMCID: PMC5975714 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-018-0290-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Attitudes, background factors and life values of the physicians in 1999 and 2015
| 1999 | 2015 | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attitudes, median VAS (IQR) | |||||
| Active euthanasia is reprehensible | 17 | (6–51) | 25 | (5–66) | 0.008 |
| Withdrawal of life-sustaining treatments is reprehensible | 89 | (76–95) | 93 | (76–99) | < 0.001 |
| Assisted suicide is reprehensible | 14 | (5–38) | 13 | (2–52) | 0.480 |
| End-of-life care is satisfying | 36 | (19–52) | 15 | (3–35) | < 0.001 |
| People should pay costs of factitious diseases by themselves | 44 | (27–72) | 78 | (46–93) | < 0.001 |
| Advance directives have been helpful in my decisions | 35 | (14–54) | 10 | (2–29) | < 0.001 |
| Good palliative care enables good death | 17 | (9–28) | 4 | (1–12) | < 0.001 |
| Physicians can’t estimate cancer pain | 40 | (25–70) | 47 | (27–72) | 0.042 |
| Religion has influence when I make ethical decisions | 65 | (31–93) | 81 | (47–98) | < 0.001 |
| Being a doctor gives me satisfaction | 20 | (11–30) | 7 | (2–18) | < 0.001 |
| My health is excellent | 20 | (10–32) | 14 | (6–26) | < 0.001 |
| I feel burn out, tired to work | 84 | (63–94) | 89 | (71–97) | < 0.001 |
| I’m pleased with my salary | 72 | (37–87) | 22 | (7–50) | < 0.001 |
| It is waste of resources to treat patients > 80 years in ICU | 73 | (49–86) | 77 | (54–93) | < 0.001 |
| Background factors and life values, n (%) | |||||
| Having children | 600 | (85) | 555 | (88) | 0.057 |
| Having own advance directive | 38 | (5) | 38 | (6) | 0.668 |
| Taking care of end-of-life patients in practice (last 2 years) | 529 | (75) | 418 | (65) | < 0.001 |
| Taking care of a family member in end-of-life | 513 | (73) | 314 | (49) | < 0.001 |
| Being afraid of death (Fear-of-death index) | 580 | (80) | 544 | (86) | 0.006 |
| Length of life is important | 412 | (59) | 524 | (87) | < 0.001 |
| Health is important | 711 | (99) | 610 | (99) | 0.027 |
| Family is important | 686 | (95) | 607 | (99) | < 0.001 |
| Clean environment is important | 666 | (93) | 599 | (98) | < 0.001 |
| High standard of living is important | 358 | (50) | 398 | (65) | < 0.001 |
| Faith in God is important | 338 | (48) | 253 | (42) | 0.024 |
| Success in professional career is important | 639 | (89) | 377 | (62) | < 0.001 |
VAS visual analogue scale
IQR interquartile range
ICU intensive care unit
*Mann-Whitney u-test for attitudes and Pearson Chi-Square for background factors and life values
Attitudes are expressed on a visual analogue scale (VAS) from 0 mm (definitely agree) to 100 mm (definitely disagree)
Attitudes of physicians who were willing or unwilling to increase the morphine dose in 1999 and 2015
| 1999 | 2015 | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Attitudes, median VAS (IQR) | Yes | No | Yes | No | ||||||
| Active euthanasia is reprehensible | 37 | (11–69) | 14 | (5–39) | < 0.001 | 33 | (5–72) | 24 | (4–64) | 0.162 |
| Withdrawal of life-sustaining treatments is reprehensible | 92 | (83–96) | 88 | (72–95) | 0.003 | 95 | (80–99) | 93 | (75–98) | 0.133 |
| Assisted suicide is reprehensible | 27 | (9–61) | 11 | (4–28) | < 0.001 | 28 | (2–68) | 10 | (1–49) | < 0.001 |
| End-of-life care is satisfying | 38 | (19–51) | 34 | (18–52) | 0.683 | 16 | (2–30) | 14 | (3–45) | 0.363 |
| People should pay costs of factitious diseases by themselves | 40 | (23–65) | 47 | (29–75) | 0.047 | 78 | (49–94) | 77 | (47–93) | 0.341 |
| Advance directives have been helpful in my decisions | 31 | (10–55) | 36 | (15–54) | 0.199 | 12 | (2–29) | 10 | (2–28) | 0.723 |
| Good palliative care enables good death | 19 | (10–25) | 16 | (9–29) | 0.833 | 4 | (1–13) | 4 | (1–13) | 0.869 |
| Physicians can’t estimate cancer pain | 35 | (22–70) | 41 | (27–71) | 0.056 | 44 | (23–69) | 50 | (29–74) | 0.006 |
| Religion has influence when I make ethical decisions | 77 | (44–94) | 57 | (30–92) | 0.040 | 86 | (49–98) | 78 | (45–98) | 0.130 |
| Being a doctor gives me satisfaction | 21 | (11–29) | 19 | (11–30) | 0.456 | 7 | (1–19) | 7 | (2–18) | 0.928 |
| My health is excellent | 21 | (10–35) | 20 | (10–31) | 0.273 | 15 | (5–27) | 14 | (06–25) | 0.751 |
| I feel burn out, tired to work | 84 | (68–93) | 84 | (62–94) | 0.701 | 88 | (75–96) | 89 | (70–97) | 0.843 |
| I’m pleased with my salary | 77 | (51–90) | 70 | (35–87) | 0.082 | 22 | (8–50) | 22 | (7–51) | 0.759 |
| It is waste of resources to treat patients over 80 years of age in ICU | 70 | (48–86) | 73 | (49–87) | 0.262 | 82 | (54–94) | 75 | (54–91) | 0.107 |
VAS visual analogue scale
IQR interquartile range
ICU intensive care unit
*Mann-Whitney U-test
Attitudes expressed on a visual analogue scale (VAS) from 0 mm (definitely agree) to 100 mm (definitely disagree)
Characteristics of the participants
| Surgeons | Internists | GPs | Oncologists | Total | ||||||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1999 | 2015 | 1999 | 2015 | 1999 | 2015 | 1999 | 2015 | 1999 | 2015 | |||||||||||
| Number (% of total) | 175 | (24) | 142 | (22) | 184 | (25) | 153 | (24) | 316 | (43) | 245 | (38) | 54 | (7) | 104 | (16) | 729 | (100) | 644 | (100) |
| Response rate, % | 58 | 47 | 61 | 47 | 63 | 49 | 51 | 66 | 62 | 51 | ||||||||||
| Female, n (%) | 33 | (19) | 47 | (33) | 60 | (33) | 81 | (53) | 170 | (55) | 173 | (71) | 30 | (56) | 85 | (82) | 293 | (41) | 386 | (60) |
| Mean age (range) | 48 | (33–66) | 51 | (33–64) | 48 | (32–70) | 52 | (33–65) | 42 | (25–63) | 47 | (25–65) | 46 | (35–61) | 48 | (32–67) | 45 | (25–70) | 50 | (25–67) |
| Working placea | ||||||||||||||||||||
| Outpatient unit | 1 | (1) | 2 | (1) | 15 | (9) | 15 | (10) | 242 | (78) | 208 | (86) | 2 | (4) | 4 | (4) | 260 | (37) | 229 | (36) |
| Hospital | 146 | (85) | 124 | (88) | 123 | (71) | 122 | (82) | 33 | (11) | 24 | (10) | 44 | (83) | 91 | (88) | 346 | (49) | 361 | (57) |
| Other | 24 | (14) | 15 | (11) | 35 | (20) | 12 | (8) | 35 | (11) | 10 | (4) | 7 | (13) | 8 | (8) | 101 | (14) | 45 | (7) |
| Years from graduation, median (range)b | 22 | (2–42) | 26 | (7–42) | 21 | (7–41) | 26 | (8–42) | 16 | (1–35) | 21 | (0–40) | 18 | (9–34) | 22 | (7–40) | 19 | (1–42) | 23 | (0–42) |
| Married, n (%) | 140 | (81) | 119 | (84) | 142 | (79) | 124 | (81) | 228 | (73) | 198 | (81) | 45 | (83) | 71 | (71) | 555 | (77) | 512 | (80) |
aFor 32 participants working place was not available
bFor 19 participants year of graduation was not available
GP general practitioner
Fig. 1Proportion of respondents who were willing to increase the morphine dose among different physician groups in 1999 and 2015
Different background factors, life values and attitudes explaining physicians’ decision to increase the morphine dose (n = 323) versus not (n = 767) in forward logistic regression analysis
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|---|---|---|---|---|
| Year of the survey | ||||
| 1999 | 578 | ref. | ||
| 2015 | 512 | 1.40 | (1.05, 1.88) | 0.024 |
| Sex | ||||
| Female | 534 | ref. | ||
| Male | 556 | 1.51 | (1.11, 2.05) | 0.009 |
| Age | 1090 | 1.02 | (1.01, 1.04) | 0.007 |
| Own advance directive | ||||
| No | 1026 | ref. | ||
| Yes | 64 | 1.74 | (1.00, 3.03) | 0.051 |
| Faith in God | ||||
| Important | 489 | ref. | ||
| Not important | 601 | 1.64 | (1.23, 2.19) | 0.001 |
| Assisted suicide is reprehensible (VAS) | 1090 | 1.13 | (1.08, 1.19) | < 0.001 |
| Physicians can’t estimate cancer pain (VAS) | 1090 | 0.94 | (0.89, 0.99) | 0.021 |
| Physician groups | 0.014 | |||
| Oncologists | 120 | ref. | ||
| Surgeons | 252 | 2.50 | (1.40, 4.46) | 0.002 |
| Internists | 268 | 2.37 | (1.34, 4.20) | 0.003 |
| GPs | 450 | 2.30 | (1.33, 3.97) | 0.003 |
ref, reference
VAS, visual analogue scale
GP, general practitioner