| Literature DB >> 33032574 |
Jane Lowers1, Melissa Scardaville2, Sean Hughes3, Nancy J Preston3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: End-of-life caregiving frequently is managed by friends and family. Studies on hastened death, including aid in dying or assisted suicide, indicate friends and family also play essential roles before, during, and after death. No studies have compared the experiences of caregivers in hastened and non-hastened death. The study aim is to compare end-of-life and hastened death caregiving experience using Hudson's modified stress-coping model for palliative caregiving.Entities:
Keywords: Caregivers; Grief; Motivation; Suicide, assisted; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33032574 PMCID: PMC7545566 DOI: 10.1186/s12904-020-00660-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Palliat Care ISSN: 1472-684X Impact factor: 3.234
PECOS Criteria
| Population | Family members or caregivers of adult patients with life-limiting illness, through the point of death |
|---|---|
| Caring for an adult patient who is dying (life expectancy < 3–6 months) or who chooses hastened death (medical aid in dying, voluntarily stopping eating and drinking, euthanasia) | |
| Caregiving in the home | |
| Caregivers’ emotional, practical, and philosophical experiences with caring for loved ones at end of life, either because of illness or related to deliberately hastened death | |
| Qualitative: interviews, focus groups, phenomenology, ethnography |
Key Search Terms
| End of Life | Hastened Death | |
|---|---|---|
| (Terminal* OR end-of-life* OR life-limiting OR cancer OR palliative OR hospice) AND (famil* OR caregiv*) | (Terminal* OR end-of-life* OR life-limiting OR cancer OR palliative OR hospice) AND (famil* OR caregiv*) | |
| N/A | [[(aid* OR assist*) AND (dying OR suicide)] OR [hasten* death] OR euthanasia OR [wish AND (hasten death OR die)] | |
| Home | Home | |
| Belief* OR experienc* OR emotion* OR support* OR need* | Belief* OR experienc* OR emotion* OR support* OR need* | |
| Qualitative | Qualitative |
Inclusion and Exclusion Criteria
| Inclusion Criteria | Exclusion Criteria |
|---|---|
| Research published in peer-reviewed journals | Ethical or legal reviews |
| Published in English | Not about caregiver experience |
| Hospice or palliative care | Case reports, personal essays |
| Life expectancy < 6 months | |
| Patient has died, caregiver is bereaved | Animal studies |
| Qualitative, interview-based studies | Patients under age 18 |
| Patient elected hastened death (hastened death review only) | Quantitative |
| Patient elected hastened death (end of life review only) |
Fig. 1Modified Stress-coping Framework, modified from Hudson (2003)
Fig. 2PRISMA (Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analysis) flow chart describing the search process for end of life caregiving
Fig. 3PRISMA (Preferred reporting items for systematic reviews and meta-analysis) flow chart describing the search process for hastened death caregiving
End of Life Caregiving Studies
| Authors | Study design | Number of Caregivers | Patient Condition |
|---|---|---|---|
| Angelo, J 2014 [ | Phenomenology | 6 | Not specified |
| Aoun, SM 2012 [ | Thematic analysis | 16 | motor neurone disease |
| Armstrong MJ, 2019 [ | Qualitative descriptive | 30 | Dementia with Lewy bodies |
| Bentley, B, 2016 [ | Thematic analysis | 12 | motor neurone disease |
| Carlander, I, 2011 [ | Descriptive | 10 | Not specified |
| Cipolletta, S 2015 [ | Phenomenology | 13 | motor neurone disease |
| Clukey, L, 2007 [ | Phenomenology | 22 | Cancer, heart disease, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, hepatitis |
| Clukey, L, 2008 [ | Thematic analysis | 9 | Not specified |
| Coristine, M, 2003 [ | Content analysis | 18 | Breast cancer |
| Dobrina, R, 2016 [ | Descriptive phenomenology | 114 | Cancer |
| Dumont, I, 2008 [ | Content analysis | 18 | Cancer |
| Fisker, T, 2007 [ | Phenomenology | 8 | Not specified |
| Glass, AP, 2016 [ | Case study | 28 | Alzheimer’s |
| Grbich, CF, 2001 [ | Thematic analysis | 12 | Cancer |
| Hasson, F, 2010 [ | Content analysis | 15 | Parkinson’s disease |
| Hasson, F, 2009 [ | Thematic analysis | 9 | Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease |
| Hisamatsu M, 2020 [ | Grounded theory | 13 | Cancer |
| Hovland CA, 2019 [ | Content analysis | 36 | Dementia |
| Hughes, M, 2015 [ | Thematic analysis | 28 | Not specified |
| Johnson, A, 2003 [ | Narrative exemplars | 1 | Not specified |
| Kalnins, I, 2006 [ | Phenomenology | 18 | cancer, stroke, heart disease |
| Linderholm, M, 2010 [ | Hermeneutic analysis | 14 | Cancer |
| Lyckhage, ED, 2013 [ | Phenomenological | 6 | Not specified |
| Mangan, PA, 2003 [ | Constant comparison | 15 | Cancer |
| Mohammed, S, 2018 [ | Grounded theory | 61 | Cancer |
| Mori, H, 2012 [ | Framework analysis | 34 | Cancer |
| Ortega-Galán, 2019 [ | Phenomenology | 81 | Not specified |
| Payne, S, 2015 [ | Cross-sectional | 59 | Cancer, other |
| Robinson, C, 2017 [ | Constant comparison | 29 | Cancer |
| Sheehy-Skeffington, B, 2014 [ | Thematic content analysis | 16 | Cancer, heart failure |
| Sinding, C, 2003 [ | Grounded theory | 12 | Breast cancer |
| Stajduhar, KI, 2013 [ | Secondary analysis of qualitative data | 114 | Not specified |
| Stone, AM, 2012 [ | Constant comparison | 35 | Lung cancer |
| Strang, VR, 2003 [ | Not specified | 15 | Cancer |
| Strauss S, 2019 [ | Discourse analysis | 46 | Not specified |
| Thomas, C, 2018 [ | Cross-sectional | 30 | Cancer, other |
| Totman, J, 2015 [ | Framework analysis | 15 | Cancer |
| Turner, M, England [ | Secondary analysis | 17 | Cancer, other |
| Vachon M, 2020 [ | Phenomenology | 22 | Not specified |
| Warrier MG, 2019 [ | Thematic analysis | Motor neuron disease | |
| Wong, WK, 2009 [ | Thematic analysis | 23 | Cancer |
| Wu MP, 2020 [ | Grounded theory | 22 | Not specified |
Hastened Death Caregiving Studies
| Author | Study Design | Type of Hastened Death | Number of Caregivers | Patient Condition |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Albert, SM, 2005 [ | Not specified | Patient wish for hastened death | 80 | Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis |
| Back, AL, 2002 [ | Grounded theory | Physician-assisted suicide | 35 | Cancer, AIDS, neurologic, other |
| Buchbinder, M, 2018 [ | Ethnography | Medical aid in dying | 19 | Not specified |
| Buchbinder, M, 2018 [ | Grounded theory | Medical aid in dying | 34 | Cancer, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis |
| Dees, 2013 [ | Thematic analysis | Euthanasia | 31 | Cancer, neurologic, other |
| Gamondi, C, 2015 [ | Grounded theory | Assisted suicide | 11 | Not specified |
| Gamondi, C, 2018 [ | Grounded theory | Assisted suicide | 11 | Cancer, AIDS, neurologic, other |
| Georges, JJ, 2007 [ | Statistical analysis of interview data | Euthanasia or physician-assisted suicide | 87 | Cancer, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis |
| Holmes, S, 2018 [ | Content analysis | Medical assistance in dying | 18 | Cancer, organ failure, neurologic |
| Jansen-Van Der Weide, MC, 2009 [ | Secondary analysis of interview data | Euthanasia | 86 | Cancer, other |
| Snijdewind, MC, 2014 [ | Inductive analysis | Euthanasia or physician-assisted suicide | 26 | Cancer, old age, neurological |
| Starks, H, 2007 [ | Inductive analysis | Hastened death | 48 | Not specified |
Appraisal
| Appraisal | End of Life | Hastened Death |
|---|---|---|
| Benign | The patient is content and comfortable [ | The patient receives services that facilitate their goal of hastened death. The death is peaceful [ |
| Challenge | Coping with escalating number and intensity of caregiving tasks, patient’s decline, disruption in routine. Demands consistent with caregiver’s sense of duty and commitment, but achievable [ | Planning and preparation, reconciling one’s own beliefs to help the patient [ |
| Threat | Events that could affect the patient’s well-being, either internal (caregiver’s own preparedness and resources) or external (availability of services). Events that affect caregiver’s effectiveness, such as fatigue. Realisation of potential for death [ | Patient denied access to hastened death; risk of incomplete ingestion, difficult or prolonged death, legal repercussions after death, social stigma [ |
| “ | ||
| Harm | Disease progression, insufficient professional help, potential to harm patient by being honest about prognosis [ | Burden of secrecy about cause of death (Switzerland), inadequate support from providers resulting in more difficult death (U.S., Canada, Netherlands) [ |
Influencing Factors
| Influencing factors | End of Life | Hastened Death |
|---|---|---|
| Ability (preparedness, mastery, competence, self-efficacy) | Knowing what to expect, being prepared for patient’s death, feeling able to learn skills to meet new demands, taking pride in ability to care, having relevant previous experience [ | Because caregivers had not facilitated hastened deaths before, few reported ability-related factors. Not knowing how to manage a difficult hastened death was stressful [ |
| “ | ||
| Structure (social support, information, respite) | Lack of support from friends and family, and lack of information about what to expect in caregiving were closely related to caregiver isolation and exhaustion. Caregivers acknowledged the importance of respite, but more often in retrospect after death [ | Experience varied by jurisdiction: Swiss caregivers and U.S. caregivers where aid in dying was illegal reported feeling isolated by potential social stigma. Where hastened death was legal, some caregivers found support from family and friends. Swiss caregivers appeared to have adequate information about hastened death, but U.S. caregivers did not always have information on how to handle difficult deaths. Respite was not mentioned in hastened death studies [ |
| Satisfaction (rewards, meaningfulness, mutuality, choice and commitment) | ||
| Outlook (anxiety, depression, and psychological distress; positive emotion; optimism) | Setting aside anticipatory grief to focus on patient, seeing patients achieve wish of peaceful death and release from suffering [ | |
| Personal (cultural factors; caregiver burden and health; patient’s disease status, level of dependency, and duration of illness; caregiver age, gender, socioeconomic status) | Exhaustion from caregiving, balancing caregiving and other life responsibilities, sense of duty to patient, patient’s acceptance or denial of condition [ | Understanding patient’s current suffering, likely trajectory and the inevitability of death, shared expectation that hastened death would be more comfortable, lack of clarity about when hastened death would be appropriate [ |
Coping
| Coping | End of Life | Hastened Death |
|---|---|---|
| Problem focused | Solving logistical problems, learning new skills, keeping household running, arranging help, focusing on patient wishes, serving as gatekeeper [ | Planning and conducting logistics such as physician appointments or filling prescriptions, planning events before, during and after death, finding solutions for protracted or complicated dying [ |
| Emotion focused | Caregiving as an opportunity to show love, be rewarded with closeness; frustration, sadness, or anticipatory grieving [ | Overall focus on fulfilling patient’s desire to avoid prolonged suffering; where hastened death was illegal or quasi-legal, moral distress in trying to reconcile patients’ request for support with own ambivalence or discomfort. In Switzerland, carrying the burden of secrecy after death [ |
| “ | ||
Event Outcome
| End of Life | Hastened Death | |
|---|---|---|
| Favourable resolution | The caregiver has the skills and resources to solve a problem; death brings an end to suffering or is consistent with patient wishes; the caregiver has guidance or professional help in dealing with post-death tasks [ | Healthcare providers help plan for or carry out the death; the caregiver finds the hastened death to be peaceful or joyful; loved ones have a chance for closure; the patient avoids unwanted suffering [ |
| “ | ||
| ‘ | ||
| Unfavourable resolution | Professional help is unavailable or inadequate; the illness causes family tension; caregiving demands are unrelenting; the death is unexpected, and the caregiver feels unprepared [ | Healthcare providers are unwilling to discuss hastened death; the patient cannot achieve hastened death and suffers; in Switzerland, the caregiver experiences ongoing distress about breaking social norms to assist in hastened death [ |
| No resolution | Caregiver lives in state of constant vigilance; caregiver cannot process or mourn the patient’s death [ |
Emotion Outcome
| Emotion outcome | End of Life | Hastened Death |
|---|---|---|
| Positive emotion | Satisfaction with overall caregiving; patient’s serenity with own condition [ | Events that align with patient’s wishes [ |
| Distress | Patient decline, conflict between exhaustion and increasing patient needs, social isolation, breaking a promise to the patient, family conflict [ | Complicated dying, moral distress about patient choice to die [ |
| Positive reappraisal | Caring provides opportunity for growth, respect, closeness, or strengthening family ties. Death allows patient to escape suffering. Escalating need for care results in more clinical resources [ | Clinicians who would not facilitate hastened death but were supportive in other ways; in retrospect, hastened death seen as right choice [ |
| Revised goals | Reducing hopes for patient’s future, deciding to encourage the patient to “let go” to avoid further suffering, admitting patient needs institution-based care [ | Putting own grief or ambivalence on hold to focus on patient’s wishes, reconciling to idea of hastened death as better option than disease trajectory or unassisted suicide [ |
| Spiritual beliefs | Taking comfort in a larger force to supply strength or determine patient’s fate, taking comfort in an afterlife [ | Spiritual or ritual elements, during or after death, add to closure [ |
| Positive events | Events that eased suffering, allowed for closure, or provided humor [ | In U.S. and Canadian studies, deaths were described as joyful, sacred, or peaceful, with patients’ wishes achieved [ |
Healthcare Professionals
| End of Life | Hastened Death | |
|---|---|---|
| Healthcare professionals | ||
Other Factors
| Other factors | End of Life | Hastened Death |
|---|---|---|
| Structure of health care delivery | Availability, or not, of specialised services or at-home care support, cost of care, social policies supporting family caregiving [ | Legality, or not, of hastened death [ |
| Grief | Variable acceptance of impending death, anticipatory grief [ | Acceptance of hastened death as better than suffering or prolonged dying [ |
A Priori Codes from Hudson Conceptual Model of Family Caregivers for Palliative Care
| Event | Change in environment or patient status, e.g., new information, worsening of symptoms, return home from hospital |
|---|---|
| Appraisal | Determining whether event is relevant to caregiver or patient’s well-being |
| Threat | Event poses a threat to patient or caregiver well-being that may be outside of caregiver’s capacity to address |
| Challenge | Event poses a potentially surmountable obstacle within caregiver’s capacity |
| Harm | Event leads to direct harm to patient or caregiver |
| Benign | Event is unlikely to change patient or caregiver status or may improve it |
| Irrelevant | Event has no bearing on patient or caregiver status |
| Coping | |
| Problem-focused coping | Acting on oneself or the environment, such as seeking information |
| Emotion-focused coping | Changing the relationship to the environment, or changing the relational meaning of the experience to avoid stress |
| Event Outcome | |
| Favourable resolution | Outcome is consistent with goals and values |
| Unfavourable resolution | Outcome is contrary to goals and values, such as harm |
| No resolution | Situation persists without opportunity for change |
| Emotion Outcome | |
| Positive emotion | Favourable resolution leads to satisfaction, end of coping |
| Distress | Unfavourable resolution of event leads to distress |
| Meaning-based coping | Unfavourable or no resolution leads to adapting one’s mental state to be able to respond to an event |
| Positive reappraisal | Finding meaning in the event based on beliefs and values |
| Revised goals | Adjusting goals for situation to obtain control |
| Spiritual beliefs | Activating spiritual beliefs to fuel emotion- or problem-based functions |
| Positive events | A satisfactory outcome to the event leads to positive appraisal |
| Variables | |
| Preparedness | How ready the caregiver perceives being, regardless of actual skill or knowledge |
| Mastery | Sense of control and enhanced self-esteem through overcoming a stressor, development of new abilities, very broadly (not task-specific) |
| Competence | Perception of self as adequate at caregiving specifically |
| Self-efficacy | Belief in one’s own ability to manage a situation. Not an inherent trait but event- and task-specific |
| Anxiety, depression and distress | Negative psychological effects of ongoing caregiving demands |
| Social support | Interactions with friends, family, coworkers. Can be positive or negative, or absent. |
| Information | Seeking information to assess problems and solutions. Successful information seeking facilitates more effective coping. |
| Rewards | Satisfaction, positive emotional gains from caregiving, such as receiving love from patient, seeing patient content, feeling accomplished |
| Meaningfulness | Caregiver sees role as worthwhile investment or challenge |
| Positive emotions | Feelings of happiness, satisfaction, recognition as opposed to stress |
| Optimism | Inherent trait that buffers caregiver against strains of caregiving |
| Mutuality | Gratitude and meaning and idea of reciprocity in relationship with patient, closeness |
| Respite | Activities or interactions outside of caregiving that reduce stress and allow caregiver to recognise his/her own needs and interests |
| Cultural factors | Expectations about familial roles that shape expectations of caregiving and influence stress and coping (e.g., duty or honour to care for spouse or parent) |
| Caregiver burden and health | Physical, emotional, psychological, financial, or social problems related to caregiving (e.g., lack of sleep, numbed emotions, isolation) |
| Choice and commitment | Making a conscious choice to take on caregiving role |
| Patient’s disease, dependency, and illness duration | Patient’s physical needs, psychological aspects of illness, and own recognition and outlook on illness |
| Caregiver age, gender, socioeconomic status | Unclear but possible relationships in response to caregiving based on relationship status, age (physical ability), economics |
| Additional codes | |
| External influences | Legal, economic, or other structural factors that shape the environment in which care is provided overall and the caregiver’s options for providing care (e.g., insurance, sick leave) |
| Grief | Anticipatory or posthumous grieving |