Patients
Benefit From End-of-Life Discussions With a Doctor
End-of-life discussions between a doctor and a
terminally ill patient do not result in more distress for patients. In
fact, they result in less aggressive medical interventions and enhanced
quality of life in a patient's final days, a major new study found.
"For the past two decades, the debate has been
around when, whether and how to have end-of-life conversations, but it
wasn't clear if it was worth it," said study lead author Dr. Alexi A.
Wright, a hematology-oncology fellow and research scholar at the Center
for Psycho-Oncology and Palliative Care Research, both at Dana-Farber
Cancer Institute in Boston. "This study is the first to look at outcomes
and quality of life."
"A lot of doctors are afraid they will rob
patients of hope if they have these conversations," Wright added. "But
there's the possibility that the patient may be robbed of the
opportunity to make informed decisions and live the life they want."
Experts had been concerned that such
conversations might increase a patient's despondency and anxiety. This
left doctors and other health-care providers relying heavily on
avoidance tactics.
For the new study, the researchers interviewed
332 pairs of dying patients -- all of whom had advanced cancer -- and
their informal caregivers. The median time from enrolment in the study
to death was 4.4 months. The caregivers' psychological state and quality
of life was assessed about 6.5 months after the patient's death.
At the start of the study, 37 percent of the
patients said they'd had end-of-life discussions with their doctor.
Contrary to expectations, these talks did not increase the rates of
depression or worry.
And those patients who did have such talks with
their physician had lower rates of ventilation (1.6 percent versus 11
percent); resuscitation (0.8 percent versus 6.7 percent) and admission
to the intensive care unit (4.1 percent versus 12.4 percent). These
patients also enrolled in a hospice earlier; longer hospice stays were
associated with better quality of life, while aggressive medical care
had the opposite effect, the study found.
Meanwhile, caregivers were significantly less
likely to experience major depressive disorders if the loved one did not
die in an intensive care unit.
One previous study, published last year in the
New England Journal of Medicine, had found that when doctors
spend 10 minutes more than usual listening to the families of people
dying in the intensive care unit and provide them with a brochure on
bereavement, those family members are far less likely to suffer from
stress, anxiety or depression after the death of their loved one.
"This really highlights the importance of
patients having end-of-life discussions with a health-care
professional," said Dr. Robert McCann, professor of medicine at the
University of Rochester School of Medicine and Dentistry and chief of
medicine at Highland Hospital in Rochester, N.Y. "Just by having
discussions -- we don't know anything about the quality of the
discussion or what was said -- led patients to better choices, things
that would make a bigger difference in quality of life."
For the physician, Wright said: "It's important
to have a healthy dose of empathy and frank truth, ask the patient if
they have thought about what this really means. Mental and physical
health often deteriorate rapidly at the end, and this can leave
health-care providers and loved ones wondering what the patient would
have wanted."
More information: The
National Hospice and Palliative Care Organization has more on
end-of-life care.
(HealthDay
News)