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"What Is Right for Me, Is Not Necessarily Right for You": The Endogenous Factors Influencing Nonparticipation in Medical Assistance in Dying. | LitMetric

AI Article Synopsis

  • - Access to Medical Assistance in Dying (MAID) is affected by laws, healthcare providers, patient requests, and geographical location, with a study focusing on reasons why some healthcare providers choose not to participate in MAID.
  • - Interviews with 17 physicians and 18 nurse practitioners revealed that their nonparticipation stems from personal experiences, comfort with death, their sense of duty, end-of-life care preferences, faith or spirituality, emotional labor considerations, and potential emotional consequences.
  • - The study identified a need for clear pathways in MAID care and discussed two concepts, conscientious objection and nonparticipation, while emphasizing the importance of maintaining a supportive relationship between healthcare providers and patients.

Article Abstract

Access to medical assistance in dying (MAID) is influenced by legislation, health care providers (HCPs), the number of patient requests, and the patients' locations. This research explored the factors that influenced HCPs' nonparticipation in formal MAID processes and their needs to support this emerging practice area. Using an interpretive description methodology, we interviewed 17 physicians and 18 nurse practitioners who identified as non-participators in formal MAID processes. Nonparticipation was influenced by their (a) previous personal and professional experiences, (b) comfort with death, (c) conceptualization of duty, (d) preferred end-of-life care approaches, (e) faith or spirituality beliefs, (f) self-accountability, (g) consideration of emotional labor, and (h) future emotional impact. They identified a need for clear care pathways and safe passage. Two separate yet overlapping concepts were identified, conscientious objection and nonparticipation MAID, and we discussed options to support the social contract of care between HCPs and patients.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8446887PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/10497323211008843DOI Listing

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