| Literature DB >> 32423444 |
Anneke Ullrich1,2, Marianna Theochari3, Corinna Bergelt4, Gabriella Marx5,6, Katharina Woellert7, Carsten Bokemeyer3, Karin Oechsle3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Caring for patients with advanced or terminal diseases can confront family caregivers (FC) with ethical challenges. The present study aims at tracing paths connected to ethical challenges among FC of advanced cancer patients by exploring morally troubling situations and related burden, as well as strategies to handle the situation and experience of moral distress from the grieving FC's perspective.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Caregivers; Decision; End-of-life care; Ethics; Moral distress; Palliative care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32423444 PMCID: PMC7236546 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-020-00573-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
Semi-structured interview guide
Presentation of one’s own person. Recognition of the special situation through the loss of the patient and appreciation of the participation in the interview. Explanation of the goals of the study and interviewing. Can you describe specific decisions or situations that were difficult for you for ethical reasons? Were there decisions or situations where you wondered if you were or another person were doing the right thing? Please consider the time from the patient’s incurable diagnosis until death. You can take as much time as you want for telling me about your experiences. When you think of the decision or situation you have described … When did you experience this decision or situation in the course of the patient’s disease? What happened? Who was involved? How burdensome was it for you to be confronted with the decision or situation? Can you describe your feelings during that decision or situation? What stressors did you face? Can you tell me how you dealt with the decision or situation? What did help you? What were sources of strength? What were your needs for information, advice and support? Were the needs met and if so, by whom / through what assistance? In which cases have needs / wishes possibly not been sufficiently taken into account? Do you remember decisions or situations that you did not think could be solved or not satisfactorily? What were the reasons? How much did the decision or the action you took / did not take correspond with your own moral expectations or values? If it did not, how did you feel at this time? What did help you to deal with these feelings? How do you currently feel (at peace, still bothering)? Do you have any questions or comments? Are there aspects that are important to you that have not yet been discussed in the interview? How do you feel now? How did you experience the interview? |
Demographic details of interviewed family caregivers (N = 12)
| ID | FC‘s gender | Kind of relationship. FC was … | Years FC knew patient in years | FC was appointed as substitute decision-maker1 | Time between diagnosis and admittance to palliative care ward | Time since patient’s death in months | Final place of patient’s death |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Female | Partner | 35 | Yes | 2–5 years | 6 | Palliative care ward |
| 2 | Female | Partner | 15 | Yes | 3–6 months | 6 | Inpatient hospice |
| 3 | Female | Partner | 30 | Yes | 2–5 years | 5 | Inpatient hospice |
| 4 | Female | Partner | 31 | Yes | 1–2 years | 7 | Palliative care ward |
| 5 | Female | Parent | 45 | No | 5–10 years | 5 | At home with specialist palliative care |
| 6 | Male | Child | 36 | Yes | 1–2 years | 6 | Nursing home |
| 7 | Male | Child | 44 | No | < 3 months | 6 | Palliative care ward |
| 8 | Female | Partner | 16 | Yes | > 10 years | 8 | Palliative care ward |
| 9 | Male | Partner | 55 | No | 1–2 years | 6 | Palliative care ward |
| 10 | Female | Partner | 30 | Yes | 1–2 years | 6 | Palliative care ward |
| 11 | Male | Close friend | 20 | Yes | 6–12 months | 6 | Inpatient hospice |
| 12 | Female | Partner | 14 | No | 2–5 years | 9 | Palliative care ward |
1 During the disease trajectory, the patient had appointed the FC to act as substitute decision-maker in terms of personal (including health) matters. Thus, the FC was permitted under the law to make decisions on behalf of the patient regarding medical decisions, if the patient lacked decision-making capacity
Abbreviations:FCFamily caregivers
Fig. 1Path 1: Ethical challenges in the context of a difficult decision-making process
Fig. 2Path 2: Ethical challenges when no decision was to be made by caregivers
Detrimental external factors that led to emotional burden among family caregivers in the context of a difficult decision-making process (Path 1)
| External factors that led to emotional burden | |
|---|---|
• To make the decision • To confront the situation • To reevaluate the situation • To prepare for what is to come | |
• About the consequences of the decision for their loved ones and their suffering • About the length of time • Discrepancy: “For a long time nothing is said, and then come sudden announcements” | |
• From the social environment • From the family • From physicians / specialist outpatient palliative care teams • From the patient | |
Detrimental factors that led family caregivers to feel shocked in the context of lack of decision-making options (Path 2)
| Factors that led to paralyzing shock | |
|---|---|
• „Ups and Downs “in the disease trajectory: hope and disappointment • Physicians don’t take family caregivers through the individual steps • Not feeling prepared for changing goal of care, occurring symptoms, deteriorating health status, dying and death | |
• Patient autonomy over caregiver’s needs • Patient withholding information • Patient not wanting to talk about the disease, death and dying • No agreement with the patient about medical decisions • Reciprocal protection | |
• Lack of empathy • Unclear statements • False hope • Indecision and inconsistency | |