AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aims to understand the decision-making processes of older adults regarding their preferred places of death, looking specifically at those who are not in the end-of-life stage.
  • Conducted through in-depth interviews in Tama City, Japan, with 20 participants and their families, the research explores the factors influencing their choices for end-of-life care.
  • Findings reveal three main categories that affect these decisions: concerns that discourage selecting a preferred place, a desire to die at home, and a preference for dying in a hospital or care facility, highlighting the importance of personal experiences and caregiver considerations.

Article Abstract

Objectives: To analyse the cognitive processes involved in the decision-making of older adults who are not in the end-of-life stage regarding the selection of a preferred place of death.

Design: A qualitative cross-sectional study based on semistructured in-depth interviews. The interview scripts were sectioned by context, then summarised, conceptualised and categorised. Post-categorisation, the relationships between the conceptual factors were examined.

Setting: Tama City, Tokyo, Japan, from November 2015 to March 2016.

Participants: 20 long-term care users and their families or care providers were interviewed about their preferred places of death and the factors behind their decisions.

Results: Three categories based on the preferred place of end-of-life care and death were extracted from the interview transcripts: (A) discouraging the decision of a preferred place of death, (B) enhancing the desire for home death and (C) enhancing the desire for a hospital/long-term care facility death. Category A consists of concerns about the caregiver's health, anxiety about solitary death, and constraints of and concerns about the household budget. Both categories B and C consist of subcategories of reinforcing and inhibiting factors of whether to desire a home death or a hospital/long-term care facility death. If their previous experiences with care at home, a hospital or a care facility were positive, they preferred the death in the same setting. If those experiences were negative, they tend to avoid the death in the same setting.

Conclusions: One's mindset and decision regarding a preferred place of death include the consideration of economic factors, concerns for caregivers, and experiences of care at home or in a hospital/long-term care facility. Furthermore, health professionals need to be aware of the ambivalence of senior citizens to support their end-of-life decisions.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9174769PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2021-059421DOI Listing

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