Hospital doctors’ experiences of caring for dying patients

Background The aim of this study was to examine, by means of a postal questionnaire, the experience of all grades of doctors caring for patients dying in an acute hospital in Scotland. Method A postal questionnaire was sent to 306 doctors working in inpatient medical and surgical specialties, em...

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Main Authors: D, H, G, C
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh 2018-12-01
Series:The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.rcpe.ac.uk/sites/default/files/jrcpe_48_4_gray.pdf
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spelling doaj-4c403d70ffd84b75922b00ccb7e6e3e82020-11-25T00:40:27ZengRoyal College of Physicians of EdinburghThe Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh1478-27152042-81892018-12-0148429930310.4997/JRCPE.2018.403Hospital doctors’ experiences of caring for dying patientsD0H1G2C3G4GrayHoodHaworthSmythLinklaterBackground The aim of this study was to examine, by means of a postal questionnaire, the experience of all grades of doctors caring for patients dying in an acute hospital in Scotland. Method A postal questionnaire was sent to 306 doctors working in inpatient medical and surgical specialties, emergency medicine, anaesthetics and intensive care medicine in an acute hospital. Results There was an overall 41% response rate (127/306). Of responding doctors 55% had cared for 10 or more patients in the previous year. A quarter of respondents had personal experience of bereavement outside of clinical practice within the previous year. A total of 65% of responding doctors agreed that their most memorable patient death had had a strong emotional impact upon them. Responding doctors reported benefit from peer support. There was no association between length of time as a doctor and difficulty rating for talking to patients about death (p-value: 0.203). There was no association between difficulty rating and length of time working as a doctor when talking to relatives about death and dying (p-value: 0.205). We considered the questionnaire responses in relation to Scottish Government policy and initiatives associated with the care of the dying, and the future training and support of doctors caring for this group of patients and their relatives. Conclusion Doctors describe similar experiences in terms of communication difficulties and emotional effects of caring for dying patients irrespective of their length of time working as a doctor.https://www.rcpe.ac.uk/sites/default/files/jrcpe_48_4_gray.pdfdeathdoctorsdyingexperiencesupport
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language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author D
H
G
C
G
spellingShingle D
H
G
C
G
Hospital doctors’ experiences of caring for dying patients
The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh
death
doctors
dying
experience
support
author_facet D
H
G
C
G
author_sort D
title Hospital doctors’ experiences of caring for dying patients
title_short Hospital doctors’ experiences of caring for dying patients
title_full Hospital doctors’ experiences of caring for dying patients
title_fullStr Hospital doctors’ experiences of caring for dying patients
title_full_unstemmed Hospital doctors’ experiences of caring for dying patients
title_sort hospital doctors’ experiences of caring for dying patients
publisher Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh
series The Journal of the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh
issn 1478-2715
2042-8189
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Background The aim of this study was to examine, by means of a postal questionnaire, the experience of all grades of doctors caring for patients dying in an acute hospital in Scotland. Method A postal questionnaire was sent to 306 doctors working in inpatient medical and surgical specialties, emergency medicine, anaesthetics and intensive care medicine in an acute hospital. Results There was an overall 41% response rate (127/306). Of responding doctors 55% had cared for 10 or more patients in the previous year. A quarter of respondents had personal experience of bereavement outside of clinical practice within the previous year. A total of 65% of responding doctors agreed that their most memorable patient death had had a strong emotional impact upon them. Responding doctors reported benefit from peer support. There was no association between length of time as a doctor and difficulty rating for talking to patients about death (p-value: 0.203). There was no association between difficulty rating and length of time working as a doctor when talking to relatives about death and dying (p-value: 0.205). We considered the questionnaire responses in relation to Scottish Government policy and initiatives associated with the care of the dying, and the future training and support of doctors caring for this group of patients and their relatives. Conclusion Doctors describe similar experiences in terms of communication difficulties and emotional effects of caring for dying patients irrespective of their length of time working as a doctor.
topic death
doctors
dying
experience
support
url https://www.rcpe.ac.uk/sites/default/files/jrcpe_48_4_gray.pdf
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