| Literature DB >> 31472690 |
Sheri Mila Gerson1,2, Amanda Bingley3, Nancy Preston3, Anne Grinyer3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Laws allowing assisted suicide and euthanasia have been implemented in many locations around the world but some individuals suffering with terminal illness receiving palliative care services are hastening death or die by suicide without assistance. This systematic review aims to summarise evidence of palliative care professionals' experiences of patients who died by suicide or hastened death in areas where assisted dying is legal and to understand when hastened death is considered to be a suicide.Entities:
Keywords: Assisted dying; Assisted suicide; Euthanasia; Health personnel; Hospices; Palliative care; Suicide
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31472690 PMCID: PMC6717643 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-019-0451-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Definition of terms
| Assisted suicide | Someone makes the means of death available but does not act as the direct agent of death |
| Euthanasia | A medical professional administers a lethal dose of medication to intentionally end a patient’s life |
| Hastened death | Someone who acts on their desire to control the circumstances of their death with or without assistance from another individual |
| Physician assisted suicide | A medical provider writes a prescription for a lethal dose of a drug to be self-administered by a competent, terminally ill patient |
| Suicide | Self-caused death |
Database search terms
| Terms | MeSH terms |
|---|---|
| 1. Suicide OR assisted suicide OR assisted dying OR aid in dying OR death with dignity OR active euthanasia AND | “suicide” “suicide, assisted” “suicide, attempted” “euthanasia, active, voluntary” |
| 2. Hospice care OR hospices OR hospice and palliative nursing OR palliative care OR palliative medicine AND | “hospice care” “hospices” “hospice and palliative nursing” “palliative care” “palliative medicine” “terminal care” |
| 3. Professional OR clinician OR physician OR nurse OR social worker OR chaplain AND | “health personnel” “attitude of health personnel” clinician*, physician*, social worker*, chaplain*, nurse* |
| 4. Experiences | Experience* |
*used to enable different forms of a word to be searched for simultaneously increasing the number of search results found
Inclusion and exclusion criteria
| Inclusion | Exclusion | |
|---|---|---|
| Population | Professionals in a palliative care and hospice context: nurses, physicians, social workers, chaplains working in locations where assisted dying is allowed | Patients, public, other carers. Locations where assisted dying, including euthanasia and assisted suicide is not allowed |
| Intervention | Hastened Death, Euthanasia, Suicide, Assisted Suicide, Physician Assisted Suicide | |
| Outcomes | Professionals’ experiences with patients who died by suicide, self-administered medications prescribed by clinician, or administration of medications by clinician with intent to hasten death | Research that does not include information about direct experiences: involvement, attitudes, communication, views |
| Study design | Any research method/design | Opinion pieces; editorials |
| Reporting (language/time period) | English Data obtained from reports from inception to present | Studies conducted prior to implementation of assisted dying laws, code, or ruling of each country or state |
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of study selection
Characteristics of studies
| Reference | Participants | Study Methods | Data Year | Research Focus | Setting | Terminology Used in Study |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Belgium | ||||||
| Anquinet L et al. (2013) [ | Two groups of physicians ( | Qualitative focus groups | 2010 | Similarities and differences between the practice of continuous sedation until death and the practice of euthanasia. | Homecare and hospital setting-palliative care unit support team | Physician Assisted Death; Euthanasia |
| Cohen J et al. (2012) [ | Physicians 480-Flanders; 305-Wallonia | Postal survey | 2008 and 2009 | Cultural differences between Walloon and Flemish physicians affecting euthanasia practice | Unspecified | Euthanasia |
| Dierckx De Casterlé, et al. (2010) [ | 18 nurses | Qualitative in-depth interviews | 2005–2006 | Nursing care for patients requesting euthanasia in general hospitals in Flanders, Belgium | Included palliative care units | Euthanasia |
| Inghelbrecht, E., et al. (2010) [ | 1678 nurses | Second phase of two-phase postal survey | 2007–2008 | Nurses involvement inconsistent in decisions about euthanasia or drugs to end a patients’ life, and nurses administer life-ending drugs even though it is not regulated | Homecare, care homes, hospital | Euthanasia by patients’ request; Administration of life ending medications without patients’ explicit request |
| Meeussen, K., et al. (2011) [ | 205 GPs | Structured phone survey | 2005–2006 | Investigated how many patients expressed a wish for euthanasia, documentation of these requests, experiences with these requests, and how it was handled | Focused on patients who died at home | Euthanasia |
| Canada | ||||||
| Beuthin, R., et al. (2018) [ | 17 nurses | Qualitative interviews | 2016 | Explored nurses experiences of MAiD | Hospital, hospice, home settings | Medical Assistance in Dying (MAiD), euthanasia, assisted suicide |
| Netherlands | ||||||
| Dees, M. K., et al. (2013) [ | 32 cases, 31 relatives, 28 physicians | Qualitative interviews | 2008–2009 | Explores decision-making process in cases where patients request euthanasia | Homes or physicians’ offices | Euthanasia |
| Georges, J. J., et al. (2008) [ | 30 GPs | Qualitative in-depth interviews | 2002–2003 | Describes experiences of general practitioners (GPs) in Netherlands dealing with a request for euthanasia from a terminally ill patient. | Unspecified | Euthanasia |
| Francke, A. L., et al. (2016) [ | 587 respondents (65%) Nurses and CNAs | Postal survey | 2011 | To give insight into Dutch nursing staff’s attitudes and involvement regarding euthanasia | Unspecified | Euthanasia |
| Norwood, F. (2007) [ | 10 physicians included in study | Ethnographic study: Foucauldian discourse | 2001 | Euthanasia, general practice, and end-of-life discourse in the Netherlands | Home | Euthanasia |
| Pasman, H. R., et al. (2013) [ | 11 physicians and 9 patients, 3 relatives | Qualitative Interviews | 2005–2007 | What happens after request for euthanasia is refused | Unspecified | Euthanasia or Physician Assisted Suicide (EAS) |
| Snijdewind, M. C., et al. (2014) [ | 28 physicians 26 relatives | Qualitative in-depth interviews | November 2011–April 2012 | According to the physicians and relatives, what are the characteristics of the complexities that can arise from the moment someone requests EAS? | Unspecified | Physician Assisted Suicide; Euthanasia |
| Van Bruchem-van de Scheur, G., et al. (2007) [ | 500 district nurses-86% response rate. 81.6% (408) used for analysis | Postal survey | 2003 | Euthanasia and physician assisted suicide in the Dutch home care sector: the role of the district nurse | 55 home care organisations | Physician Assisted Suicide; Euthanasia |
| Van Bruchem-van de Scheur, G.,et al. (2008) [ | 1509 nurses; 1179 responses analysed (78.1%) | Telephone survey | 2003 | The role of nurses in euthanasia and physician-assisted suicide in the Netherlands | Hospital, nursing homes and home care | Physician Assisted Suicide; Euthanasia |
| Van Marwijk, H., et al. (2007) [ | 22 physicians | Qualitative, four focus groups | 2003 | Impact of euthanasia on primary care physicians in the Netherlands | Primary care | Euthanasia; Assisted Suicide |
| Switzerland | ||||||
| Otte, I. C., et al. (2016) [ | 23 General Practitioners (GPs) | Qualitative interviews | 2012–2013 | Barriers to professional communication about Physician Assisted Suicide | Unspecified | Physician Assisted Suicide |
| Gamondi, C., et al. (2017) [ | 23 palliative care physicians | Qualitative study | 2015 | Physician responses to assisted suicide requests | Unspecified | Assisted Suicide |
| United States | ||||||
| Carlson, B, et al. 2005 [ | 50 out of 77 hospice chaplains (65% response) | Postal survey | 2003 | Attitudes and experiences of hospice chaplains with patients requesting physician assisted suicide | Hospice home care | Physician-Assisted Suicide (PAS); Oregon Death with Dignity Act (ODDA) |
| Chin, et al. 1999 [ | 14 physicians | Qualitative interviews | Report of 1998 data | First year’s experience with legalised assisted suicide in Oregon | Unspecified | Physician-Assisted Suicide |
| Clymin, J., et al. 2012 [ | 582 out of 7500 nurses | Qualitative component of email survey | 2010 | Nurses knowledge of the Death with Dignity Act | Unspecified | Death With Dignity Act (DWDA) Physician Assisted Death (PAD) |
| Dobscha, SK, et al. 2004 [ | 35 physicians | Qualitative semi-structured interviews | 2000 | Physicians responses to requests for assisted suicide | Unspecified | DWDA; Assisted Suicide |
| Ganzini, L., et al. 2003 [ | 35 physicians | Qualitative in-depth interviews | 2000 | Oregon physicians’ perceptions of patients who request assisted suicide | Unspecified | Assisted Suicide |
| Ganzini, L., et al. 2000 [ | 2649 of 4053 physicians (65% response) | Postal survey | 1999 | Physicians’ experiences with the Oregon Death with Dignity Act | Unspecified | Oregon Death with Dignity Act |
| Ganzini, L., et al. 2001 [ | 2641 physicians (65% response) | Postal survey | 1999 | Physicians’ attitudes/experiences with end-of-life care since passage of the Oregon Death with Dignity Act | Unspecified | DWDA |
| Ganzini, L., et al. 2002 [ | 307 nurses and social workers of 545 (72–78% response) | Postal survey | 2001 | Experiences of nurses and social workers with hospice patients who requested suicide assistance | Hospice home care | Assisted Suicide |
| Ganzini, L., et al. 2003 [ | 307 nurses of 429 (72% response) | Postal survey | 2001 | Nurses’ experiences with hospice patients who refuse food and fluids to hasten death | Hospice home care | Voluntary Refusal of Food and Fluids (VRFF) Physician Assisted Suicide (PAS) |
| Harvath, et al. 2006 [ | 20 nurses and social workers | Qualitative interviews | Not clearly stated | Dilemmas encountered by hospice workers when patients wish to hasten death | Hospice home care | Physician Assisted Suicide; Hastened Death |
| Miller, L. et al. 2004 [ | 306 nurses and 85 social workers (72–78% response) | Postal survey | 2001 | Attitudes/experiences of Oregon hospice nurses and social workers regarding assisted suicide | Hospice home care | Assisted Suicide; Oregon Death with Dignity Act (ODDA) |
| Norton, E. M. & Miller, P. J. 2012 [ | 9 social workers | Focus group | Since passing of the law | Social workers discuss DWDA | Hospice home care | DWDA |
| International (Netherlands and Oregon) | ||||||
| Voorhees, J. R., et al. (2014) [ | 36 physicians | Qualitative semi-structured interviews | 2007–2008 | Physicians’ experiences in the United States and the Netherlands | No | Physician-Assisted Dying (PAD) |