October 14, 2008

Talking about death

More evidence that what you intuited is true.

Talking about death eases end of life for patients, loved ones.

Researchers led by Dr. Alexi Wright of the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute report in the Journal of the American Association on interviews with 332 terminally ill cancer patients recruited at seven outpatient clinics. Patients who said they did not have end-of-life conversations got significantly more aggressive care in their final week of life, which was linked to lower quality of life near death. Their caregivers also suffered, feeling regret, poor quality of life, and a higher risk of developing depression.

Patients who said they did have end-of-life discussions were more likely to have a better quality of life in their last days, less likely to get aggressive care, and more likely to receive hospice services. Their loved ones said they felt less regret, and better quality of life, during their bereavement.

"Our results suggest that
end-of-life discussions may have cascading benefits for patients and their caregivers," the authors wrote.

Posted by Jill Fallon at October 14, 2008 10:11 AM | Permalink
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