Is patient autonomy a critical determinant of quality of life in Korea? End-of-life decision making from the perspective of the patient

Author:

Mo Ha Na1,Shin Dong Wook2,Woo Jae Ha3,Choi Jin Young1,Kang Jina1,Baik Young Ji1,Huh Yu Rae4,Won Joo Hee5,Park Myung Hee6,Cho Sang Hee7

Affiliation:

1. National Cancer Control Institute, National Cancer Center, Korea

2. Department of Family Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul, Korea

3. Claremont Graduate University, USA

4. Bobath Memorial Hospital, Korea

5. Saemmul Hospice Hospital, Korea

6. The Catholic University of Korea, Seoul St. Mary’s Hospital, Korea

7. Chonnam National University Hwasun Hospital, Korea

Abstract

Purpose: We aimed to investigate the current practice of the involvement in decision making from the perspectives of terminal cancer patients, and to explore its possible associations with quality of life and quality of death in Korea. Methods: A multi-center, cross-sectional survey was performed on 93 terminal cancer patients. The questionnaire solicited their opinions regarding participation in treatment decision making, as well as quality of life (European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality-of-Life Questionnaire for Palliative Care) and quality of death (Good Death Inventory-Patient Version). Results: A total of 78.5% of the patients had awareness of their terminal status, while 21.5% did not; 42.4% stated that they knew their condition and shared the decision-making responsibility with the medical staff and their family, while 21.7% made decisions on their own, and 35.9% left the decision-making responsibility to others. Patients who were aware of their illness and who actively participated in the decision making did not score higher than others on outcome measures of quality of life and quality of death. Moreover, the former even showed lower scores in some domains, including the ‘physical and psychological comfort’ (4.99 versus 5.61, p = 0.03), ‘environmental comfort’ (5.51 versus 6.04, p = 0.08), and ‘emotional functioning’ (55.70 versus 71.01, p = 0.06). Conclusion: in Korea, patient autonomy is not a universally accepted value from the perspectives of terminal cancer patients, nor is patient involvement in decision making always conducive to high quality of life or quality of death. The level of information and the pace at which it is provided should be tailored to each individual’s ability, preference, need, and culture.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,General Medicine

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