Clinician perspectives on voluntary assisted dying and willingness to be involved: a multisite, cross‐sectional survey during implementation in New South Wales, Australia

Author:

Light Edwina12ORCID,Kerridge Ian134,Skowronski George156ORCID,Venkatesha Venkatesha7,Krishnamurthy Aravind8,Kuper Suzanne9,Noonan Kerrie101112,Hoyle Philip13,Arnold Mark1014ORCID,Manley Stephen15ORCID,Stedman Wade1617,Sheahan Linda12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Sydney Health Ethics, School of Public Health University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

2. South Eastern Sydney Local Health District Sydney New South Wales Australia

3. Haematologist and BMT Physician Royal North Shore Hospital Sydney New South Wales Australia

4. Department of Philosophy Macquarie University Sydney New South Wales Australia

5. St George Hospital South Eastern Sydney Local Health District Sydney New South Wales Australia

6. Faculty of Medicine University of New South Wales Sydney New South Wales Australia

7. Northern Sydney Local Health District Executive Sydney New South Wales Australia

8. Clinical Governance Unit South Eastern Sydney Local Health District Sydney New South Wales Australia

9. Northern NSW Local Health District Ballina New South Wales Australia

10. Western NSW Local Health District Dubbo New South Wales Australia

11. Public Health Palliative Care Unit La Trobe University Melbourne Victoria Australia

12. School of Social Psychology Western Sydney University Sydney New South Wales Australia

13. Royal North Shore Hospital Northern Sydney Local Health District Sydney New South Wales Australia

14. School of Rural Health, Sydney Medical School, Faculty of Medicine and Health University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

15. Cancer Services and Innovation Northern NSW Local Health District Ballina New South Wales Australia

16. Northern Sydney Local Health District Sydney New South Wales Australia

17. VAD Implementation NSW Health Sydney New South Wales Australia

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundIn the context of nationwide law reform, New South Wales (NSW) became the last state in Australia to legalise voluntary assisted dying (VAD) – commencing 28 November 2023. Clinicians have divergent views regarding VAD, with varying levels of understanding, support, and willingness to be involved, and these may have a significant impact on the successful implementation.AimsTo understand levels of support, understanding and willingness to be involved in VAD among clinical staff across NSW during implementation of VAD.MethodsA multisite, cross‐sectional online survey of clinicians across four local health districts, assessing relevant demographics, awareness of and support for VAD legislation and willingness to be involved in different levels of VAD‐related clinical activities.ResultsA total of 3010 clinical staff completed the survey. A majority of participants were aware of VAD legislation in NSW (86.35%) and supportive of it (76%), with nursing and allied health clinicians significantly more likely than medical specialists to express support. Among medical specialists, support was statistically more likely in those who did not care for patients at the end of life and those with limited knowledge of the legislation. Willingness of medical specialists to perform key roles was significantly lower, with 41.49% willing to act in coordinating or consulting roles, and only 23.21% as administering practitioners.ConclusionsThe majority of clinical staff surveyed across NSW supported VAD legislation. While many eligible clinicians were reluctant to be actively involved, sufficient numbers appear willing to provide VAD services, indicating that successful implementation should be possible.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Internal Medicine

Reference26 articles.

1. NT Government.Terms of Reference – Expert Advisory Panel Voluntary Assisted Dying legislation in the Northern Territory (Internet).2023[cited 2023 Sep 13] p. 4. Available from URLhttps://cmc.nt.gov.au/project-management-office/voluntary-assisted-dying

2. Parliament of NSW.NSW Voluntary Assisted Dying Act 2022 (Internet).2023. [cited 17/2022 Nov 28] Available from URLhttps://www.parliament.nsw.gov.au/bills/Pages/bill-details.aspx?pk=3891

3. Looking back to look forward—the history of VAD laws in Australia and future law reform in the Australian territories

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