AI Article Synopsis

  • Respiratory therapists (RTs) deal with death regularly but lack understanding of their own attitudes toward it, prompting a study to investigate how their work environment and personal traits affect these attitudes.
  • A survey comparing critical care RTs (CCRTs) and non-critical care RTs (non-CCRTs) found that non-CCRTs had a lower acceptance of death and a tendency to avoid thinking about it.
  • Results showed that CCRTs were more neutrally accepting of death, while factors such as experience, gender, mental health, and education on life and death significantly influenced RTs' attitudes.

Article Abstract

Respiratory therapists (RTs) frequently encounter death in their work with critically ill patients. Healthcare providers' attitudes toward death significantly affect their approach to caring for dying patients; however, there is a lack of knowledge on RTs' attitudes toward death. This study examines how the work environment and personal characteristics of RTs influence their attitudes toward death. Utilizing the Death Attitude Profile-Revised-Chinese questionnaire, a cross-sectional survey compared non-critical care RTs (non-CCRTs, N = 86) to critical care RTs (CCRTs, N = 85). Non-CCRTs displayed significantly lower scores in overall acceptance of death compared to CCRTs ( = 0.015) and a tendency to actively avoid thoughts about death ( = 0.005). CCRTs scored higher in "neutral acceptance" ( = 0.015), and non-CCRTs exhibited higher scores on items reflecting a negative attitude toward death. RTs with shorter professional tenures showed heightened fear of death and avoidance tendencies. Perception of life and death education correlated with higher "fear of death" and "death avoidance" scores ( = 0.001). The findings indicate that CCRTs demonstrate a more neutral acceptance of death. Additionally, experience, sex, mental health status, and life-death education exposure significantly influence RTs' attitudes toward death.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11312054PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/healthcare12151533DOI Listing

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