| Literature DB >> 32770966 |
Monica Verhofstadt1,2, Kurt Audenaert3, Kris Van den Broeck4, Luc Deliens5,6, Freddy Mortier5,6,7, Koen Titeca8,9, Koen Pardon5,6, Dirk De Bacquer6, Kenneth Chambaere5,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Since its legalisation in 2002, the number of times euthanasia has been carried out in response to requests from adults with psychiatric conditions (APC) has continued to increase. However, little is known about why and how psychiatrists become engaged in the assessment of such euthanasia requests.Entities:
Keywords: Assisted suicide; Euthanasia; Mental disorders; Psychiatry; Survey study
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32770966 PMCID: PMC7414658 DOI: 10.1186/s12888-020-02792-w
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Psychiatry ISSN: 1471-244X Impact factor: 3.630
Psychiatrists’ demographics and professional characteristics (N/%)a
| Variables | Sample ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender | ||
| Male | 100 | 56.2 |
| Female | 75 | 42.1 |
| Unknown | 3 | 1.7 |
| Age (in years) | ||
| < 30 | 27 | 15.1 |
| 30–40 years | 39 | 21.9 |
| 41–60 years | 64 | 36.0 |
| > 60 | 48 | 27.0 |
| Worked as psychiatrist or psychiatric trainee during last year | ||
| Yes | 161 | 90.4 |
| No | 16 | 9.0 |
| Unknown | 1 | 0.6 |
| Clinical settingb | ||
| Private or Group Practice | 80 | 44.9 |
| Psychiatric Hospital Care | 120 | 67.4 |
| Community Mental HealthCare Center | 22 | 12.4 |
| Psychiatric Nursing Home | 9 | 5.1 |
| Psychiatric Home Care | 6 | 3.4 |
| Sheltered housing | 12 | 6.7 |
| Otherc | 26 | 14.6 |
| Work experience (in number of years) | ||
| < 5 years | 32 | 18.0 |
| 6–10 years | 20 | 11.2 |
| 11–20 years | 41 | 23.0 |
| > 20 years | 85 | 47.8 |
| Ever received special training in EOL | ||
| Yes | 9 | 5.1 |
| No | 167 | 93.8 |
| Unknown | 2 | 1.1 |
| Readiness to be involved in euthanasia procedure(s) | ||
| Yes | 149 | 83.7 |
| No | 29 | 16.3 |
aIn the online survey tool, explicit consent from the respondent had been asked by inserting the question “Do you agree to take part in this survey?” immediately after the informed consent statement and right before the start of the survey. If respondents clicked the option “no”, they have been sent directly to the ‘Non-response Questionnaire’ and only asked to clarify their motives for non-response. Hence, no other data (e.g. sex, work experience) was gathered nor included in this Table
bClose to 43% of the psychiatrists (76 out of 178) indicated to be professionally active in more than one workplace
cOther workplaces: prison or forensic psychiatric centers, psychiatric and psychosocial rehabilitation centers, psychiatric mobile crisis or response teams, other housing and care centers for other subpopulations (e.g. students, disabled persons)
Engagement of psychiatrists in euthanasia, throughout their career
| Confronted with euthanasia throughout their career | Sample ( |
|---|---|
| Ever confronted with such requests | 143 (80.3) |
| 130 (73.0) | |
| 13 (7.3) | |
| Ever engaged in assessment for euthanasia in APC patientsa | |
| No, never | 48 (27.5) |
| Yes, as | 130 (72.5)b |
| 78 (43.8) | |
| 54 (30.3) | |
| with patients from my practice | 41 (23.0) |
| for patients referred to me by a colleague | 27 (15.2) |
| 35 (19.7) | |
| 39 (21.9) | |
| 8 (4.5) | |
| with patients from my practice | 8 (4.5) |
| for patients referred to me by a colleague | 0 (0.0) |
| - in another rolec | 12 (6.8) |
a56 psychiatrists (43.4%) indicated that they have been actively engaged in more than one role, other than the role of referring physician. Seventy-one psychiatrists (55% of all 129 psychiatrists ever engaged in such euthanasia procedures) indicated that they have not been engaged in more than one role, throughout their career (46 psychiatrists as referring physician, 13 as attending physician, 7 as formally advising and 5 as preliminary advising physician)
b One of the 130 cases was not yet involved
c12 psychiatrists indicated being involved in another role, most of them were passively involved as the treating physician of the patient’s psychopathology (e.g. discussing the euthanasia request during or after the euthanasia procedure, as well as during crisis confinement), as a member of the psychiatric care facility’s ethics committee or as trainee in psychiatry
Psychiatrists actively engaged in euthanasia cases during the previous 12 months
| N/% of all engaged psychiatrists | % total sample ( | |
|---|---|---|
| How many psychiatrists were engaged in any role? | 108 (100%) | 60.6% |
| 1. In 1–2 euthanasia procedures | 76 (70.4%) | 42.7% |
| 2. In 3–5 euthanasia procedures | 24 (22.2%) | 13.5% |
| 3. In > 5 euthanasia procedures | 8 (7.4%) | 4.5% |
| How many psychiatrists were asked to be engaged as formally advising physician? | 102 (96.2%) | 57% |
Psychiatrists engaged as “formally advising physician” during the past 12 months
| Type of engagement | In 1–2 euthanasia procedures | In 3–5 euthanasia procedures | In more than 5 euthanasia procedures | Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Giving any advice | 76 (100%) | 20 (100%) | 6 (100%) | |
| Giving Formal Positive Advice | 36 (47.4%) | 3 (15%) | 2 (33.3%) | 41 (40.2%)a |
| Giving Formal Negative Advice | 26 (34.2%) | 14 (70%) | 2 (33.3%) | 42 (41.2%)b |
| Refusing to give Formal Advice | 14 (6.3%) | 3 (15%) | 2 (33.3%) | 19 (18.6%)c |
aof which 16 psychiatrists (39%) only gave positive advices
bof which 17 psychiatrists (40%) only gave negative advices
cof which 10 psychiatrists (52.7%) only refused to give advices
Motives for (not) refusing to be engaged in euthanasia assessment procedures regarding APC (sort by frequency)
| Motives for refusing to be engaged in psychiatric euthanasia proceduresa | |
| 1. Fundamental motives | |
| Fundamental objections against euthanasia regarding psychiatric patients (ethical, moral, deontological reasons) | |
| Euthanasia is incompatible with therapeutic relationship, but should be topic for further exploration in life track | |
| Physicians should never give the sign to the patient of giving up hope | |
| Law needs to be re-examined as criteria are unclear or need to be further restricted for this patient group | |
| In that specific time, the euthanasia law was not yet effective | |
| 2. Ineligibility of the patient’s euthanasia request | |
| Treatment options were still left, including non-medical treatment | |
| Substantive legal criteria were not fulfilled | |
| Personality disorder as contra-indication | |
| 3. Complex circumstances | |
| Patient’s complex family situation | |
| Patient’s young age | |
| Not enough knowledge on the patient and her situation | |
| Not enough competence to get actively involved | |
| 4. Experience of rehabilitation with former patients with withdrawn request | |
| Motives for accepting to be engaged in euthanasia procedures concerning psychiatric patientsa | |
| 1. Fundamental motives | |
| Fundamental right of the patient to ask for euthanasia | |
| Fundamental task of the psychiatrist to take and discuss the request seriously | |
| Opportunity to keep on searching for underlying meaning request and treatment options | |
| 2. Eligibility of the patient’s euthanasia request | |
| Unbearable and untreatable suffering do exist | |
| Specific task of the psychiatrist to be involved in the assessment | |
| The euthanasia request is always based on misfortunes in many more domains in life |
aThese motives result from 65 psychiatrists’ answers to the open ‘What was your motive to (not) refuse to be actively engaged in the clarification of the patient’s euthanasia request?
Socio-demographic and professionals factors in psychiatrists’ engagement in the euthanasia decision-making procedure
| Ever performed the role of … | Performing physician | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NO ROLE | Referring physician | Preliminary advising physician | Formal advising physician | Attending physician | ||
| Sex | ||||||
| Male ( | 25 (25) | 43 (43.9) | 16 (16.3) | 27 (27) | 34 (34) | 5 (5) |
| Female ( | 24 (32) | 33 (44) | 17 (22.7) | 12 (16) | 19 (25.3) | 3 (4) |
| Age | ||||||
| < 40 ( | 23 (34.8) | 32 (48.5) | 12 (18.2) | 2 (3) | ||
| 41–60 ( | 14 (21.9) | 32 (50) | 11 (17.2) | 4 (6.3) | ||
| > 60 ( | 12 (25.5) | 14 (29.2) | 12 (25) | 2 (4.2) | ||
| Years of work experience | ||||||
| < 10 ( | 20 (38.5) | 24 (46.2) | 10 (19.2) | 1 (1.9) | ||
| 10–20 ( | 9 (22) | 19 (46.3) | 11 (26.8) | 4 (9.8) | ||
| > 20 ( | 20 (23.8) | 35 (41.2) | 14 (16.5) | 3 (3.5) | ||
| Perceived Competence | ||||||
| Yes ( | 37 (41.6) | |||||
| No ( | 41 (46.6) | |||||
In bold: p < .05
aIn bold: significant results after Bonferroni test for multiple comparisons, p < .0033
bIn bold: significant results after Bonferroni test for multiple comparisons, p < .005