AI Article Synopsis

  • This study focuses on comparing how family members perceive the quality of death in patients who died from cardiovascular disease (CVD) versus cancer.
  • A survey was sent out to family members of deceased CVD patients, with results showing that the quality of death score for CVD patients was lower compared to cancer patients receiving palliative care, but higher than those in general wards.
  • Ultimately, the findings suggest that while the quality of death for CVD patients is generally perceived as lower than for those in palliative care, it does not significantly differ from cancer patients in non-palliative care settings.

Article Abstract

Background: Outcome measures during acute cardiovascular disease (CVD) phases, such as quality of death, have not been thoroughly evaluated. This is the first study that compared the family members' perceptions of quality of death in deceased CVD patients and in deceased cancer patients using a bereaved family survey.

Methods: Retrospectively sent questionnaire to consecutive family members of deceased patients with CVD from ten tertiary hospitals from October 2017 to August 2018. We used the short version of the Good Death Inventory (GDI) and assessed overall care satisfaction. Referencing the GDI, the quality of death was compared between CVD patients admitted to a non-palliative care unit (non-PCU) and cancer patients in palliative care units (PCU) and non-PCUs in the Japan Hospice and Palliative Care Evaluation Study (J-HOPE Study). Additionally, in the adjusted analysis, multivariable linear regression was performed for total GDI score adjusted by the patient and participant characteristics to estimate the difference between CVD and other patients.

Results: Of the 243 bereaved family responses in agreement (response rate: 58.7%) for CVD patients, deceased patients comprised 133 (54.7%) men who were 80.2 ± 12.2 years old on admission. The GDI score among CVD patients (75.0 ± 15.7) was lower (worse) than that of cancer patients in the PCUs (80.2 ± 14.3), but higher than in non-PCUs (74.4 ± 15.2). After adjustment, the total GDI score for CVD patients was 7.10 points lower [95% CI: 5.22-8.97] than for cancer patients in PCUs and showed no significant differences compared with those in non-PCUs (estimates, 1.62; 95% CI [-0.46 to 5.22]).

Conclusions: The quality of death perceived by bereaved family members among deceased acute CVD patients did not differ significantly from that of deceased cancer patients in general wards, however, was significantly lower than that of deceased cancer patients admitted in PCUs.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11282702PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12904-024-01521-4DOI Listing

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