| Literature DB >> 31585541 |
Jaap Schuurmans1,2, Romy Bouwmeester3, Lamar Crombach3, Tessa van Rijssel3, Lizzy Wingens3, Kristina Georgieva3, Nadine O'Shea3, Stephanie Vos3, Bram Tilburgs4, Yvonne Engels4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: In the Netherlands, in 2002, euthanasia became a legitimate medical act, only allowed when the due care criteria and procedural requirements are met. Legally, an Advanced Euthanasia Directive (AED) can replace direct communication if a patient can no longer express his own wishes. In the past decade, an exponential number of persons with dementia (PWDs) share a euthanasia request with their physician. The impact this on physicians, and the consequent support needs, remained unknown. Our objective was to gain more insight into the experiences and needs of Dutch general practitioners and elderly care physicians when handling a euthanasia request from a person with dementia (PWD).Entities:
Keywords: Dementia; Elderly; Elderly care physician general practitioners; Euthanasia; Primary care; Support
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31585541 PMCID: PMC6778363 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-019-0401-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
The Topic Guide Key Items
| Topics | |
|---|---|
| 1.General opinion of and experience with euthanasia requests and procedures | |
| 2. Determinants for deciding whether euthanasia should be performed | |
| 3 Experience with euthanasia requests and procedures in dementia cases in particular | |
| 4. Effects on work | |
| 5. Need for support mechanisms | |
| 6. Suggestions |
Characteristics and Participants Background (n = 11)
| PARTICIPANTS | No. (%) | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Male | 7 (64) | |
| Female | 4 (36) | |
| Age | ||
| 40–50 | 3 (27) | |
| 50–60 | 3 (27) | |
| 60–70 | 2 (12) | |
| 70–80 | 3 (27) | |
| Current workplacea | ||
| General practice | 2 (18) | |
| End of life clinic | 2 (18) | |
| Nursing home | 2 (18) | |
| Hospital | 1 (11) | |
| Retired | 2 (18) | |
| Hospice | 1 (11) | |
| Palliative consulting team | 1 (11) | |
| Elderly care trainer | 1 (11) | |
| Participants’ basic training | ||
| Elderly care physician | 6 (55) | |
| General practitioner | 5 (45) | |
| Participants’ experience | ||
|
| 2 (18) | |
| 0 | 2 (18) | |
| 1 | 2 (18) | |
| 2 | 2 (18) | |
| 3 | 1 (11) | |
| > 100 | 2 (18) | |
| Unknown | ||
|
| 4 (36) | |
| Requests | Procedures | 1 (11) |
| 0 | 0 | 1 (11) |
| 1 | 0 | 2 (18) |
| 2 | 1 | 1 (11) |
| 2 | 0 | 1 (11) |
| 3 | 0 | 1 (11) |
| 10 | 6 | > 40 (11) 1(11) |
| Unknown | > 40 | 1 (11) |
SCEN, ‘support and consultation during euthanasia procedure’
aMultiple categories per participant possible
Overview of themes, categories and codes
| THEMES | CATEGORIES | CODES |
|---|---|---|
| Evaluation of the euthanasia request |
| ⋅ too late in the dementia trajectory |
| ⋅ no repeated clear request | ||
| ⋅ mental incompetence | ||
|
| ⋅ unbearable suffering in future | |
| ⋅ has to feel right | ||
| ⋅ repeated clear convincing request | ||
| Difficulties experienced by doctors |
| ⋅ different timing and agenda’s of doctors and patients |
| ⋅ diagnosis takes too long | ||
|
| ⋅ work pressure | |
| ⋅ long preparation | ||
| ⋅ labor-intensive | ||
|
| ⋅ pressure by family | |
| ⋅ request from family | ||
| ⋅ part of the suffering lies with the family | ||
|
| ⋅ society not dementia-friendly | |
| ⋅ euthanasia is considered a good death | ||
| ⋅ negative perspective on dementia | ||
| ⋅ slippery slope regarding granting euthanasia | ||
| ⋅ changed perspective on death and dying | ||
| ⋅ autonomy is leading | ||
|
| ⋅ difficult communication due to dementia | |
| ⋅ conversation with or without family | ||
|
| ⋅ unbearable suffering is unclear | |
| ⋅ judging mental competence difficult | ||
| ⋅ vague guidelines | ||
| ⋅ AED not useful in dementia cases | ||
| ⋅ AED are complicated | ||
| Expertise |
| ⋅ improves quality on care |
| ⋅ experiences reduces fear | ||
| ⋅ infrequency | ||
|
| ⋅ pros: more time for patients, safety net, legal support | |
| ⋅ cons: stigmatization, contributes to slippery slope, no negative view on euthanasia | ||
| Support and coping |
| ⋅ colleagues and other professionals |
| ⋅ buddy system | ||
| ⋅ emotional support by own family | ||
| ⋅ too costly to implement | ||
|
| ⋅ assisted suicide | |
| ⋅ palliative care (palliative sedation) | ||
| Doctor’s emotions |
| - nervous |
| ⋅ frustrated | ||
| ⋅angriness | ||
| ⋅ restless· | ||
|
| ⋅ relief and satisfaction | |
| ⋅ feeling of control | ||
| ⋅ heroism |