| Literature DB >> 31510976 |
Kirsten Evenblij1, H Roeline W Pasman2, Agnes van der Heide3, Johannes J M van Delden4, Bregje D Onwuteaka-Philipsen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Although euthanasia and assisted suicide (EAS) in people with psychiatric disorders is relatively rare, the increasing incidence of EAS requests has given rise to public and political debate. This study aimed to explore support of the public and physicians for euthanasia and assisted suicide in people with psychiatric disorders and examine factors associated with acceptance and conceivability of performing EAS in these patients.Entities:
Keywords: Assisted suicide; Attitudes; Epidemiology; Euthanasia; Medical decision making; Psychiatric disorders; Public opinion
Year: 2019 PMID: 31510976 PMCID: PMC6737595 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-019-0404-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Background characteristics of the respondents to the online survey (n = 1965)a
| No. | % | |
|---|---|---|
| Demographics | ||
| Gender | ||
| Male | 992 | 50.5 |
| Female | 973 | 49.5 |
| Age (years) | ||
| 16–39 | 414 | 21.1 |
| 40–69 | 1144 | 58.2 |
| ≥ 70 | 407 | 20.7 |
| Composition household | ||
| Living with partner | 1446 | 73.6 |
| Living without partner | 519 | 26.4 |
| Education | ||
| Low | 552 | 28.1 |
| Middle | 636 | 32.4 |
| High | 777 | 39.5 |
| Ethnicity | ||
| Dutch | 1897 | 97.7 |
| Non-Dutch | 45 | 2.3 |
| Belongs to a philosophic sector | ||
| Yes | 954 | 49.2 |
| No | 984 | 50.8 |
| Considers philosophy important | ||
| Yes | 378 | 19.2 |
| No philosophy / philosophy not important | 1587 | 80.8 |
| Urbanization living area | ||
| Low urban | 759 | 39.0 |
| Middle urban | 402 | 20.7 |
| High urban | 783 | 40.3 |
| Health status | ||
| General health | ||
| (very) good | 1626 | 82.7 |
| Moderate – (very) bad | 339 | 17.3 |
| Presence depression | ||
| Yes | 79 | 4.0 |
| No | 1886 | 96.0 |
| Characteristics related to EAS | ||
| Experience: someone close has requested a physician for EAS | ||
| Yes | 657 | 33.5 |
| No | 1305 | 66.5 |
| Opinion: Do you think it is a good thing that there is an euthanasia law | ||
| Yes, I reckon I would request EAS | 1498 | 76.4 |
| Yes, but I would never request EAS myself | 241 | 12.3 |
| No, I do not think it is good to have this law | 14 | 0.7 |
| No, I am against EAS | 99 | 5.0 |
| Do not know | 110 | 5.6 |
| Knowledge: Psychiatric patients are not eligible for EAS (incorrect). | ||
| Agree (incorrectly answered) | 536 | 27.3 |
| Disagree (correctly answered) | 681 | 34.7 |
| Do not know | 748 | 38.1 |
a Number of missing varied between 0 and 27 (1.4%)
Background characteristics of physicians (n = 1354)a
| General practitioners | Elderly care physicians | Medical specialists | Psychiatrists | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. (%) | No. (%) | No. (%) | No. (%) | |
| Demographics | ||||
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 260 (43.3) | 80 (38.5) | 198 (60.0) | 122 (59.5) |
| Female | 341 (56.7) | 128 (61.5) | 132 (40.0) | 83 (40.5) |
| Age in years | ||||
| < 40 | 167 (27.5) | 28 (13.4) | 88 (26.6) | 20 (9.6) |
| 40–54 | 280 (46.1) | 105 (50.2) | 176 (53.2) | 103 (49.8) |
| ≥ 55 | 160 (26.4) | 76 (36.4) | 67 (20.2) | 84 (40.6) |
| Religious belief | ||||
| No | 398 (66.6) | 130 (62.5) | 241 (73.7) | 117 (57.9) |
| Yes | 200 (33.4) | 78 (37.5) | 86 (26.3) | 85 (42.1) |
| Professional characteristics | ||||
| Years of experience | ||||
| < 10 | 142 (23.4) | 22 (10.5) | 65 (19.6) | 46 (22.2) |
| ≥ 10 | 465 (76.6) | 187 (89.5) | 266 (80.4) | 161 (77.8) |
| Palliative care education | ||||
| No | 261 (43.6) | 76 (36.9) | 257 (77.9) | 195 (96.1) |
| Yes | 338 (56.4) | 130 (63.1) | 73 (22.1) | 8 (3.9) |
| Consultant palliative care/member palliative care team | ||||
| No | 597 (98.5) | 181 (87.9) | 309 (93.9) | 202 (99.5) |
| Yes | 9 (1.5) | 25 (12.1) | 20 (6.1) | 1 (0.5) |
| SCEN physician | ||||
| No | 580 (95.7) | 194 (94.2) | 325 (99.1) | 199 (98.0) |
| Yes | 26 (4.3) | 12 (5.8) | 3 (0.9) | 4 (2.0) |
| Ever received an explicit EAS request | ||||
| No | 42 (6.9) | 49 (23.4) | 182 (55.2) | 111 (58.1) |
| Yes, but never performed EAS | 92 (15.2) | 60 (28.7) | 73 (22.1) | 73 (38.2) |
| Yes, and ever performed EAS | 472 (77.9) | 100 (47.8) | 75 (22.7) | 7 (3.7) |
| Received an EAS request from a psychiatric patient in the past year | ||||
| No | 564 (95.4) | 196 (95.6) | 325 (99.4) | 164 (83.7) |
| Yes | 27 (4.6) | 9 (4.4) | 2 (0.6) | 32 (16.3) |
| Ever performed EAS on request from a psychiatric patientb | ||||
| Nee | 572 (95.2) | 199 (95.2) | 327 (99.1) | 184 (96.3) |
| Ja | 29 (4.8) | 10 (4.8) | 3 (0.9) | 7 (3.7) |
a Number of missing varied between 0 (0%) and 35 (2.6%)
b General practitioners, medical specialists and elderly care physicians were asked whether they found it conceivable that they would perform EAS in patients with psychiatric disorders. This specification, ‘in patients with psychiatric disorders’, was omitted for psychiatrists, as they presumably do not receive EAS requests from patients without psychiatric disorders
Fig. 1Public acceptance of EAS in people with psychiatric disorders and physician’s conceivability of performing EAS in these patients.* *General public: 19 missing (1.0%), physicians: 109 missing (8.1%). General practitioners, medical specialists and elderly care physicians were asked whether they found it conceivable that they would perform EAS in patients with psychiatric disorders. This specification, ‘in patients with psychiatric disorders’, was omitted for psychiatrists, as they presumably do not receive EAS requests from patients without psychiatric disorders
Characteristics associated with the general public acceptability of EAS in case of a psychiatric condition (n = 1946)*
| Absolute | EAS acceptable | Univariable | Multivariable | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| numbers | Row % | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 983 | 50.8 | Reference | |
| Female | 963 | 54.6 | 1.167 (0.977–1.395) | – |
| Age | ||||
| 16–39 | 408 | 54.2 |
| |
| 40–69 | 1136 | 54.6 |
| |
| ≥ 70 | 402 | 45.8 | Reference | – |
| Living with partner | ||||
| No | 510 | 54.7 | Reference | |
| Yes | 1436 | 51.9 | 0.895 (0.731–1.096) | – |
| Education level | ||||
| Low | 551 | 44.3 | Reference | Reference |
| Middle | 624 | 50.5 |
|
|
| High | 771 | 60.4 |
|
|
| Ethnicity | ||||
| Non-Dutch | 45 | 37.8 | Reference | Reference |
| Dutch | 1897 | 53.0 |
|
|
| Religious life-stance important | ||||
| No | 1568 | 58.7 | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | 378 | 27.5 |
|
|
| Urbanization level | ||||
| Low | 751 | 49.1 | Reference | Reference |
| Middle | 399 | 50.6 | 1.062 (0.833–1.353) | 1.075 (0.833–1.386) |
| High | 775 | 57.3 |
|
|
| General health | ||||
| Less than good | 334 | 57.2 | Reference | Reference |
| (very) Good | 1612 | 51.7 | 0.803 (0.633–1.018) |
|
| Presence of depression | ||||
| No | 1868 | 52.4 | Reference | |
| Yes | 78 | 59.0 | 1.305 (0.824–2.068) | – |
* Number of missing varied between 0 and 21 (1.1%). Bold indicates statistical significance (p < 0.05)
– indicates the item was entered in the regression but was eliminated in the stepwise procedure because p > 0.10
Characteristics associated with the physician’s conceivability of performing EAS in case of psychiatric suffering (n = 1245)*
| Absolute | EAS conceivable | Univariable | Multivariable | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| numbers | Row % | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
| Gender | ||||
| Male | 607 | 39.4 | Reference | Reference |
| Female | 629 | 37.7 | 0.931 (0.740–1.171) |
|
| Age | ||||
| < 40 | 288 | 40.3 | 0.863 (0.628–1.186) | – |
| 40–54 | 615 | 35.0 |
| – |
| ≥ 55 | 342 | 43.9 | Reference | |
| Religious beliefs | ||||
| No | 802 | 44.3 | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | 425 | 27.5 |
|
|
| Specialty | ||||
| General practitioner | 535 | 47.1 | Reference | Reference |
| Elderly care physician | 193 | 44.6 | 0.903 (0.648–1.256) | 0.954 (0.675–1.346) |
| Medical specialist | 314 | 20.1 |
|
|
| Psychiatrist | 203 | 39.4 | 0.730 (0.526–1.015) |
|
| Years of experience | ||||
| < 10 | 265 | 35.8 | Reference | |
| ≥ 10 | 980 | 39.4 | 1.163 (0.877–1.541) | – |
| Completed palliative care training | ||||
| No | 742 | 36.1 | Reference | |
| Yes | 489 | 41.9 |
| – |
| SCEN physician | ||||
| No | 1197 | 36.8 | Reference | |
| Yes | 39 | 89.7 |
| NE |
| Consultant palliative care/member palliative care team | ||||
| No | 1186 | 38.3 | Reference | |
| Yes | 50 | 44.0 | 1.267 (0.716–2.241) | – |
| Ever received an EAS request | ||||
| No | 378 | 23.0 | Reference | |
| Yes, but never performed EAS | 292 | 27.7 | 1.284 (0.904–1.823) | NE |
| Yes, and performed EAS | 561 | 54.4 |
| NE |
| Received an EAS request from a psychiatric patient in the past year | ||||
| No | 1148 | 37.3 | Reference | Reference |
| Yes | 67 | 55.2 | 2.075 (1.263–3.408) |
|
* Number of missing varied between 0 and 30 (2.4%). The variables ‘SCEN-physician’ and ‘ever having received/granted a request’ were not entered into the multivariable model due to collinearity with other variables in the model. Bold indicates statistical significance (p < 0.05)
– indicates the item was entered in the regression but was eliminated in the stepwise procedure because p > 0.10, NE indicates the item was not entered in the regression