Quality of dying and death desired by residents of Kagawa Prefecture, Japan: a qualitative study

Abstract Background Achieving a desirable death is an urgent aging-related problem in Japan. However, measures of the quality of death and dying in Japan are lacking. This study aimed to identify components of a desirable death in the residents of Kagawa prefecture, Japan, through focus group interv...

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Main Authors: Kanae Kanda, Nobuko Takashima, Yoshimi Tsuji, Katsunori Yokoyama, Tomohiro Hirao
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-07-01
Series:Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12199-019-0806-8
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spelling doaj-c43d3ba8eab64b0686940193b8f1a7342020-11-25T02:32:39ZengBMCEnvironmental Health and Preventive Medicine1342-078X1347-47152019-07-012411710.1186/s12199-019-0806-8Quality of dying and death desired by residents of Kagawa Prefecture, Japan: a qualitative studyKanae Kanda0Nobuko Takashima1Yoshimi Tsuji2Katsunori Yokoyama3Tomohiro Hirao4Department of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Kagawa UniversityDepartment of Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences, Kagawa Prefectural University of Health SciencesDepartment of Nursing, Faculty of Health Sciences, Kagawa Prefectural University of Health SciencesDivision of Health and Welfare Administration, Department of Health and Welfare, Kagawa Prefectural OfficeDepartment of Public Health, Faculty of Medicine, Kagawa UniversityAbstract Background Achieving a desirable death is an urgent aging-related problem in Japan. However, measures of the quality of death and dying in Japan are lacking. This study aimed to identify components of a desirable death in the residents of Kagawa prefecture, Japan, through focus group interviews. Methods A group interview was conducted with 30 residents aged 20–80 (M age = 50.9, SD = 22.1 years; 43.3% ≥ 65 years; 40.0% unemployed) who had experienced the death of a closely associated person. Participants were grouped into four generations with diverse characteristics (e.g., age, sex, occupation). The interview lasted 1–2 h and involved one interviewer, one observer, and one recorder. The interview theme was “What is a desirable death?” Participants were asked “What do you want to achieve before you die?” or “What would a close friend want to experience when death is near?” We then extracted important items related to “desirable death” using serialization and observation records, while also consulting three analysts. The analysis results of the four generations were ultimately integrated into final categories. Results The most common experience of a familiar death was that of parents, followed by grandparents. Half of participants had witnessed the death. Through category analysis, eight important categories related to desirable death were ultimately extracted. Nine items were identified as common to all generations. While the elderly generation had wide-ranging opinions, the younger generations’ opinions tended to concentrate on satisfaction with life and family relations. Conclusion Eight concepts were extracted as important factors of a desirable death from the residents of Kagawa prefecture, Japan.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12199-019-0806-8Group interviewLocal residentsQuality of deathQuality of dying
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kanae Kanda
Nobuko Takashima
Yoshimi Tsuji
Katsunori Yokoyama
Tomohiro Hirao
spellingShingle Kanae Kanda
Nobuko Takashima
Yoshimi Tsuji
Katsunori Yokoyama
Tomohiro Hirao
Quality of dying and death desired by residents of Kagawa Prefecture, Japan: a qualitative study
Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine
Group interview
Local residents
Quality of death
Quality of dying
author_facet Kanae Kanda
Nobuko Takashima
Yoshimi Tsuji
Katsunori Yokoyama
Tomohiro Hirao
author_sort Kanae Kanda
title Quality of dying and death desired by residents of Kagawa Prefecture, Japan: a qualitative study
title_short Quality of dying and death desired by residents of Kagawa Prefecture, Japan: a qualitative study
title_full Quality of dying and death desired by residents of Kagawa Prefecture, Japan: a qualitative study
title_fullStr Quality of dying and death desired by residents of Kagawa Prefecture, Japan: a qualitative study
title_full_unstemmed Quality of dying and death desired by residents of Kagawa Prefecture, Japan: a qualitative study
title_sort quality of dying and death desired by residents of kagawa prefecture, japan: a qualitative study
publisher BMC
series Environmental Health and Preventive Medicine
issn 1342-078X
1347-4715
publishDate 2019-07-01
description Abstract Background Achieving a desirable death is an urgent aging-related problem in Japan. However, measures of the quality of death and dying in Japan are lacking. This study aimed to identify components of a desirable death in the residents of Kagawa prefecture, Japan, through focus group interviews. Methods A group interview was conducted with 30 residents aged 20–80 (M age = 50.9, SD = 22.1 years; 43.3% ≥ 65 years; 40.0% unemployed) who had experienced the death of a closely associated person. Participants were grouped into four generations with diverse characteristics (e.g., age, sex, occupation). The interview lasted 1–2 h and involved one interviewer, one observer, and one recorder. The interview theme was “What is a desirable death?” Participants were asked “What do you want to achieve before you die?” or “What would a close friend want to experience when death is near?” We then extracted important items related to “desirable death” using serialization and observation records, while also consulting three analysts. The analysis results of the four generations were ultimately integrated into final categories. Results The most common experience of a familiar death was that of parents, followed by grandparents. Half of participants had witnessed the death. Through category analysis, eight important categories related to desirable death were ultimately extracted. Nine items were identified as common to all generations. While the elderly generation had wide-ranging opinions, the younger generations’ opinions tended to concentrate on satisfaction with life and family relations. Conclusion Eight concepts were extracted as important factors of a desirable death from the residents of Kagawa prefecture, Japan.
topic Group interview
Local residents
Quality of death
Quality of dying
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12199-019-0806-8
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