| Literature DB >> 31847816 |
Kirsten Evenblij1, H Roeline W Pasman2, Johannes J M van Delden3, Agnes van der Heide4, Suzanne van de Vathorst5, Dick L Willems5, Bregje D Onwuteaka-Philipsen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Physicians who receive a request for euthanasia or assisted suicide may experience a conflict of duties: the duty to preserve life on the one hand and the duty to relieve suffering on the other hand. Little is known about experiences of physicians with receiving and granting a request for euthanasia or assisted suicide. This study, therefore, aimed to explore the concerns, feelings and pressure experienced by physicians who receive requests for euthanasia or assisted suicide.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31847816 PMCID: PMC6918628 DOI: 10.1186/s12875-019-1067-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Fam Pract ISSN: 1471-2296 Impact factor: 2.497
Concerns in the most recent case of a euthanasia request
| Request refused | Request granted | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Total | ||
| The emotional burden of performing EAS | 107 (48.0%) | 140 (58.3%) | 0.026 |
| The emotional burden of preparing EAS | 106 (45.9%) | 130 (54.2%) | 0.072 |
| Assessing whether the due care criteria have been met | 90 (38.5%) | 52 (21.7%) | < 0.001 |
| The time the decision-making process would take | 74 (31.6%) | 66 (27.8%) | 0.370 |
| Dealing with relatives of the patient | 64 (28.3%) | 27 (11.4%) | < 0.001 |
| Waiting for the judgement of the euthanasia review committees | 56 (25.5%) | 63 (26.4%) | 0.825 |
| The administration of lethal drugs | 47 (25.0%) | 77 (32.5%) | 0.092 |
| The administrative burden of notifying the unnatural death | 54 (24.4%) | 99 (41.4%) | < 0.001 |
| The reactions of other care providers | 42 (18.3%) | 13 (5.4%) | < 0.001 |
aMissings: Refused cases missing cases varied between 14 and 60 (5.6–24.2%), Granted cases missing cases varied between 5 and 8 (2.0–3.3%)
Pressure in the most recent case of a euthanasia requesta
| Request refused | Request granted | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total | Total | ||
| the patient to grant the request | 146 (60.3%) | 32 (13.2%) | < 0.001 |
| the patient or his/her relatives to perform EAS as soon as possible | 86 (35.5%) | 55 (22.6%) | 0.002 |
| relatives of the patients to grant the request | 77 (31.7%) | 15 (6.2%) | < 0.001 |
| colleagues to refuse the request | 9 (3.7%) | 5 (2.1%) | 0.275 |
| relatives of the patient to refuse the request | 8 (3.3%) | 5 (2.1%) | 0.399 |
| colleagues to grant the request | 7 (2.9%) | 1 (0.4%) | 0.037b |
| the management to refuse the request | 6 (2.5%) | 1 (0.4%) | 0.122b |
aMissings: Refused cases missing cases varied between 5 and 6 (2.0–2.4%), Granted cases missing cases varied between 2 and 3 (0.8–1.2%)
b 2 cells (50%) had expected count less than 5 hence a Fisher’s Exact test was performed
Factors associated with perceived pressure (pressured by patient to grant the request)
| Refused cases | Univariable logistic regression | Granted cases | Univariable logistic regression | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No pressure | Pressure | No pressure | Pressure | |||
| OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |||||
| Patient characteristics | ||||||
| Gender | ||||||
| Male | 43 (46.2%) | 55 (37.9%) | Reference | 116 (55.0%) | 12 (37.5%) | Reference |
| Female | 50 (53.8%) | 90 (62.1%) | 1.41 (0.83–2.39) | 95 (45.0%) | 20 (62.5%) | 2.04 (0.95–4.38) |
| Age (year) | ||||||
| ≤ 64 | 45 (46.9%) | 48 (32.9%) | Reference | 53 (25.2%) | 11 (34.4%) | Reference |
| 65–79 | 26 (27.1%) | 44 (30.1%) | 1.59 (0.84–2.99) | 97 (46.2%) | 11 (34.4%) | 0.55 (0.22–1.34) |
| ≥ 80 | 25 (26.0%) | 54 (37.0%) | 60 (28.6%) | 10 (31.3%) | 0.80 (0.32–2.04) | |
| Cancer | ||||||
| No | 69 (72.6%) | 126 (87.5%) | 91 (43.3%) | 19 (59.4%) | Reference | |
| Yes | 26 (27.4%) | 18 (12.5%) | 119 (56.7%) | 13 (40.6%) | 0.52 (0.25–1.12) | |
| Presence psychiatric disorder | ||||||
| No | 61 (63.5%) | 79 (54.1%) | Reference | 197 (93.4%) | 30 (93.8%) | Reference |
| Yes | 35 (36.5%) | 67 (45.9%) | 1.48 (0.87–2.51) | 14 (6.6%) | 2 (6.3%) | 0.94 (0.20–4.34) |
| Life-expectancy | ||||||
| < 1 month | 15 (15.8%) | 7 (4.8%) | Reference | 46 (21.8%) | 4 (12.5%) | Reference |
| 1–5 months | 10 (10.5%) | 12 (8.2%) | 2.57 (0.75–8.78) | 91 (43.1%) | 10 (31.3%) | 1.26 (0.38–4.25) |
| ≥ 6 months | 70 (73.7%) | 127 (87.0%) | 74 (35.1%) | 18 (56.3%) | 2.80 (0.89–8.78) | |
| Communication possible | ||||||
| Less than good (reasonable-barely) | 42 (43.8%) | 64 (44.1%) | Reference | 16 (7.6%) | 3 (9.4%) | Reference |
| Good | 54 (56.3%) | 81 (55.9%) | 0.98 (0.59–1.66) | 195 (92.4%) | 29 (90.6%) | 0.79 (0.22–2.89) |
| Opinions of relatives regarding the request | ||||||
| Not supporting (neutral, divided, opposing) | 54 (56.8%) | 94 (64.8%) | Reference | 10 (4.7%) | 4 (12.5%) | Reference |
| Supporting | 41 (43.2%) | 51 (35.2%) | 0.72 (0.42–1.21) | 201 (95.3%) | 28 (87.5%) | 0.35 (0.10–1.19) |
| Physician characteristics | ||||||
| Specialty | ||||||
| General practitioner | 42 (43.8%) | 71 (49.3%) | Reference | 151 (73.7%) | 21 (67.7%) | Reference |
| Elderly care physician | 18 (18.8%) | 25 (17.4%) | 0.82 (0.40–1.68) | 28 (13.7%) | 5 (16.1%) | 1.28 (0.45–3.69) |
| Medical specialist | 12 (12.5%) | 7 (4.9%) | 18 (8.8%) | 3 (9.7%) | 1.20 (0.33–4.42) | |
| Psychiatrist | 24 (25.0%) | 41 (28.5%) | 1.01 (0.54–1.90) | 8 (3.9%) | 2 (6.5%) | 1.80 (0.36–9.04) |
| Gender | ||||||
| Male | 40 (42.6%) | 64 (44.1%) | Reference | 104 (49.8%) | 19 (59.4%) | Reference |
| Female | 54 (57.4%) | 81 (55.9%) | 0.94 (0.56–1.58) | 105 (50.2%) | 13 (40.6%) | 0.68 (0.32–1.44) |
| Age (year) | ||||||
| ≤ 39 | 20 (20.8%) | 16 (11.0%) | Reference | 49 (23.2%) | 5 (15.6%) | Reference |
| 40–54 | 54 (56.3%) | 79 (54.1%) | 1.83 (0.87–3.84) | 83 (39.3%) | 19 (59.4%) | 2.24 (0.79–6.39) |
| ≥55 | 22 (22.9%) | 51 (34.9%) | 79 (37.4%) | 8 (25.0%) | 0.99 (0.31–3.21) | |
| Number of explicit request received in the last year | ||||||
| 0 | 40 (41.6%) | 54 (37.0%) | 0.54 (0.26–1.14) | 52 (24.6%) | 10 (31.3%) | 1.41 (0.48–4.19) |
| 1 | 23 (24.0%) | 34 (23.3%) | 0.59 (0.26–1.34) | 68 (32.2%) | 9 (28.1%) | 0.97 (0.32–2.92) |
| 2 | 19 (19.8%) | 23 (15.7%) | 0.48 (0.20–1.15) | 47 (22.3%) | 7 (21.9%) | 1.09 (0.34–3.50) |
| ≥ 3 | 14 (14.6%) | 35 (24.0%) | Reference | 44 (20.9%) | 6 (18.8%) | Reference |
Missings: Refused cases missings varied between 6 and 10 (2.4–4.0%), Granted cases missings varied between 2 and 9 (0.8–3.7%). Bold indicates statistical significance (p < 0.05)
Physicians’ feelings after the most recent case in which they granted an EAS request and support sought to deal with this
| Total | |
|---|---|
| Feelings of “comfort” | |
| Satisfactory | 145 (60.4%) |
| Relief | 33 (13.8%) |
| Total | 160 (66.7%) |
| Feelings of “discomfort” | |
| Burdensome | 119 (49.6%) |
| Heavy responsibility | 110 (45.8%) |
| Emotional | 106 (44.2%) |
| Total | 192 (80.0%) |
| Other feelings | |
| Unnatural | 23 (9.6%) |
| Sought support | |
| No | 150 (62.2%) |
| Yes, from | 91 (37.8%) |
| colleagues/team | … 77 (31.4%) |
| from relatives (privekring) | … 60 (24.5%) |
| intervision | … 11 (4.5%) |
| professional support | … 1 (0.4%) |
| other | … 5 (2.0%) |
*Missings varied between 4 and 5 (1.6–2%)
Factors associated with burdensome feelings after the most recent case of euthanasiaa
| Not burdensome | Burdensome | Univariable logistic regression analysis | |
|---|---|---|---|
| OR (95% CI) | |||
| Patient characteristics | |||
| Gender | |||
| Male | 60 (49.6%) | 67 (56.3%) | Reference |
| Female | 61 (50.4%) | 52 (43.7%) | 0.76 (0.46–1.27) |
| Age (year) | |||
| ≤ 64 | 31 (25.6%) | 32 (26.9%) | Reference |
| 65–79 | 52 (43.0%) | 55 (46.2%) | 1.03 (0.55–1.91) |
| ≥ 80 | 38 (31.4%) | 32 (26.9%) | 0.82 (0.41–1.61) |
| Cancer | |||
| No | 52 (43.0%) | 55 (46.6%) | Reference |
| Yes | 69 (57.0%) | 63 (53.4%) | 0.86 (0.52–1.44) |
| Presence psychiatric disorder | |||
| No | 114 (94.2%) | 111 (93.3%) | Reference |
| Yes | 7 (5.8%) | 8 (6.7%) | 1.17 (0.41–3.35) |
| Life-expectancy | |||
| < 1 month | 26 (21.5%) | 24 (20.2%) | Reference |
| 1–5 months | 55 (45.5%) | 45 (37.8%) | 0.89 (0.45–1.75) |
| ≥ 6 months | 40 (33.1%) | 50 (42.0%) | 1.35 (0.68–2.71) |
| Communication possible | |||
| Less than good (reasonable-barely) | 9 (7.4%) | 10 (8.4%) | Reference |
| Good | 112 (92.6%) | 109 (91.6%) | 0.88 (0.34–2.24) |
| Opinions of relatives regarding the request | |||
| Not supporting (neutral, divided, opposing) | 6 (5.0%) | 7 (5.9%) | Reference |
| Supporting | 115 (95.0%) | 112 (94.1%) | 0.84 (0.27–2.56) |
| Physician characteristics | |||
| Specialty | |||
| General practitioner | 86 (72.9%) | 86 (74.8%) | Reference |
| Elderly care physician | 15 (12.7%) | 17 (14.8%) | 1.13 (0.53–2.41) |
| Medical specialist | 14 (11.9%) | 6 (5.2%) | 0.43 (0.16–1.17) |
| Psychiatrist | 3 (2.5%) | 6 (5.2%) | 2.00 (0.49–8.26) |
| Gender | |||
| Male | 61 (50.8%) | 60 (50.8%) | Reference |
| Female | 59 (49.2%) | 58 (49.2%) | 1.00 (0.60–1.66) |
| Age (year) | |||
| ≤ 39 | 32 (26.4%) | 22 (18.5%) | Reference |
| 40–54 | 40 (33.1%) | 60 (50.4%) | |
| ≥ 55 | 49 (40.5%) | 37 (31.1%) | 1.10 (0.55–2.19) |
| Number of explicit request received in the last year | |||
| 0 | 25 (20.7%) | 35 (29.4%) | |
| 1 | 31 (25.6%) | 45 (37.8%) | |
| 2 | 33 (27.3%) | 21 (17.6%) | 1.13 (0.51–2.51) |
| ≥ 3 | 32 (26.5%) | 18 (15.1%) | Reference |
| I felt pressured by the patient and/or his relatives to perform EAS as soon as possible | |||
| No | 100 (82.6%) | 85 (71.4%) | Reference |
| Yes | 21 (17.4%) | 34 (28.6%) | |
| I was concerned about administering the lethal drugs | |||
| No | 91 (75.8%) | 68 (58.6%) | Reference |
| Yes | 29 (24.2%) | 48 (41.4%) | |
| Occurrence of complications or adverse events during the performance of EAS | |||
| No | 114 (95.8%) | 110 (92.4%) | Reference |
| Yes | 5 (4.2%) | 9 (7.6%) | 1.87 (0.61–5.74) |
| I sought support to process the EAS | |||
| No | 79 (65.8%) | 69 (58.0%) | Reference |
| Yes | 41 (34.2%) | 50 (42.0%) | 1.40 (0.83–2.36) |
a Missings varied between 5 and 12 (2.0–4.9%). Bold indicates statistical significance (p < 0.05)