Authors
Camilla Zimmermann, Nadia Swami, Monika Krzyzanowska, Natasha Leighl, Anne Rydall, Gary Rodin, Ian Tannock, Breffni Hannon
Publication date
2016/7/12
Journal
Cmaj
Volume
188
Issue
10
Pages
E217-E227
Publisher
CMAJ
Description
Background
Early palliative care is increasingly recommended but seldom practised. We sought to examine perceptions of palliative care among patients with advanced cancer and their caregivers.
Methods
After conducting a cluster randomized controlled trial of early palliative care versus standard care for patients with advanced cancer, we approached patients and their caregivers to participate in semistructured interviews seeking to assess, qualitatively, their attitudes and perceptions about palliative care. We used the grounded theory method for data collection and analysis.
Results
A total of 48 patients (26 intervention, 22 control) and 23 caregivers (14 intervention, 9 control) completed interviews. Participants’ initial perceptions of palliative care in both trial arms were of death, hopelessness, dependency and end-of-life comfort care for inpatients. These perceptions provoked fear and avoidance, and often originated from interactions with health care professionals. During the trial, those in the intervention arm developed a broader concept of palliative care as “ongoing care” that improved their “quality of living” but still felt that the term itself carried a stigma. Participants in the intervention group emphasized the need for palliative care to be reframed and better explained by health care professionals. Participants in the control group generally considered it pointless to rename palliative care, but many in the intervention group stated emphatically that a different name was necessary in the early outpatient setting.
Interpretation
There is a strong stigma attached to palliative care, which may persist even after positive experiences with an early palliative …
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