Patient interviews
Between 9/2017 and 1/2018, 11 (69%) patients receiving palliative care participated in face-to-face interviews lasting nine to 79 minutes. Reasons for patients refusing to partake or health professionals judging the patient incapable of participation were (acute) deterioration of physical (3/5) or mental (2/5) health status. Table 1 presents further details on interviewees.
Table 1. Sociodemographic data of the interviewees
N
|
11
|
Age
|
M, SD
|
71.7 (13.9)
|
Min, Max
|
51, 89
|
Gender
|
Male (n, %)
|
7 (63.6)
|
Female (n, %)
|
4 (36.4)
|
First language
|
German (n, %)
|
11 (100.0)
|
Educational level
|
Higher education entrance qualification (n, %)
|
5 (45.5)
|
Higher secondary school (n, %)
|
5 (45.5)
|
Lower secondary school (n, %)
|
1 (9.1)
|
Vocational training
|
Professional training (n, %)
|
6 (54.6)
|
University degree (n, %)
|
2 (18.2)
|
None (n, %)
|
2 (18.2)
|
Not specified (n, %)
|
1 (9.1)
|
Diagnosis
|
Cancer (colon, lung, liver, breast & abdominal, lower jaw, larynx, glioblastoma) (n, %)
|
7 (63.6)
|
Geriatric multimorbidity (n, %)
|
2 (18.2)
|
Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) (n, %)
|
2 (18.2)
|
Care Setting
|
Home care (n, %)
|
4 (36.4)
|
Residential care (n, %)
|
2 (18.2)
|
Hospice care (n, %)
|
3 (27.3)
|
In-patient care (n, %)
|
2 (18.2)
|
Interview Setting
|
At home (n, %)
|
4 (36.4)
|
Hospice (n, %)
|
3 (27.3)
|
Residential care facility (n, %)
|
2 (18.2)
|
Hospital (n, %)
|
2 (18.2)
|
All but one of the interviewees reported desire to die either as a wish for hastened death or as acceptance of death without requiring to hasten it. A desire for physician assisted suicide was reported explicitly once, and two interviewees preferred death to deteriorating symptoms. Isolation, the feeling of being a burden, hopelessness and fear of pain were reasons reported for desire to die.
Deductive categories based on topics from the interview guideline were complemented with inductive coding of the interviews, producing five main categories with various sub-categories: “Actively building the relationship”, “Conversation partner”, “Conversation context and structure”, “Conversation set up and framework” and „Own Desire to Die“. Within the formulated categories, patients mainly confirmed the dimensions and recommendations of the clinical approach draft, yet emphasized individuality:
Well, you can’t develop a very RIGID guideline, I think. It’ll need to cover a vast spectrum, starting from one point at the bottom and spreading VERY, VERY wide apart at the top. (patient 1)
However, some sub-categories added valuable insight and contributed to the revision of the semi-structured clinical approach draft. Those sub-categories are reported below.
Almost all of the interviewees appreciated the proactive assessment of desire to die by health professionals:
Interviewer: Would it have been helpful to you, if [the health professional] had addressed [the desire to die]?
Patient: Yes. I think so. […] I don’t know how other patients feel, but talking about it was very difficult for me. (patient 3)
To initiate and discuss problems, establishing a trustful health-professional-patient-relationship is a prerequisite, which both sides have to allow for. Unobtrusively signaling an appreciative attitude best frames the setting: conscious eye contact and relational touch can help to establish intimacy, if appropriate:
Patient: Who among you [health professionals] even gives hugs anymore or takes someone’s arm? […] You all have a hard time with that.
Interviewer: This would be something important to you?
Patient: Of COURSE. (patient 7)
When arranging for an appropriate environment to talk about desire to die, privacy and the patient’s mental state should be taken into account. Furthermore, taking enough time was unanimously appreciated and considered helpful in signaling special attention.
One patient reported that thoughts concerning hastened death primarily arose upon first confrontation with her cancer diagnosis. Breaking bad news was also experienced as traumatic by other cancer patients.
While most of the patients preferred to talk to their physician, all members of the palliative care team were deemed fit for a dialogue about desire to die. If required, participants indicated that support from external experts should be sought:
Patient: [The health professional said:] “We can call a pastoral worker for you […] to talk to.” […] I didn’t KNOW what to talk about with a pastoral worker. But he was here for an hour and there WAS a lot to talk about, apparently. (patient 5)
Delphi survey
Based on the clinical approach draft revised after the patient interviews, a Delphi survey was conducted between 1/2018 and 3/2018. Round one was open for 22 days; round two for 16 days. There was almost no dropout (5.0%) between rounds; during the first round 210 invitees participated and 200 during round two. We excluded 61/51 panelists that did not meet inclusion criteria from analysis. Therefore, in both rounds, 149 participants were fit for data analysis according to inclusion criteria. This number goes far beyond our original recruitment plans, encompassing 50-70 panelists and is due to the overwhelming feedback from German (nursing) experts. With 91% of the sample reporting to work in direct patient contact, it consists largely of practitioners. For socio-demographic details on the Delphi sample see Table 1.
Table 2. Sociodemographic data of the Delphi sample
N
|
149
|
Age
|
Mean (Minimum, Maximum)
|
49.3 (19, 72)
|
|
n (%)
|
Gender
|
Female
|
107 (71.8)
|
Male
|
42 (28.2)
|
Residence
|
Germany
|
132 (88.6)
|
Other countries
Spain
Canada
Switzerland, Norway
USA, Australia, El Salvador, Sweden, Portugal
|
17 (11.4)
- n = 5
- n = 3
- n = 2 each
- n = 1 each
|
Expertise †
|
Nursing
|
91 (61.1)
|
Physician
|
21 (14.1)
|
Psychology and psychotherapy
|
9 (6.0)
|
Spiritual care
|
11 (7.4)
|
Ethics counseling
|
10 (6.7)
|
Social work
|
1 (0.7)
|
Relatives
|
12 (8.1)
|
Research and science
|
20 (13.4)
|
Non-practitioners, e.g. moral philosophers
|
13 (8.7)
|
Other
|
17 (11.4)
|
Self-assessment
|
|
n (%)
|
Experience in years
|
Dealing with desire to die (DD) in clinical practice
|
<1
|
3 (2.0)
|
1-9
|
58 (38.9)
|
≥ 10
|
81 (54.4)
|
missing
|
7 (4.7)
|
Dealing with suicidality in clinical practice
|
<1
|
39 (26.2)
|
1-9
|
41 (27.5)
|
≥ 10
|
63 (42.3)
|
missing
|
6 (4.0)
|
Studying DD from a theoretical perspective
|
<1
|
58 (38.9)
|
1-9
|
61 (40.9)
|
≥ 10
|
21 (14.1)
|
missing
|
9 (6.0)
|
Studying suicidality from a theoretical perspective
|
<1
|
82 (55.0)
|
1-9
|
39 (26.2)
|
≥ 10
|
19 (12.8)
|
missing
|
9 (6.0)
|
|
Mean (Standard Deviation)
|
Confidence‡
|
Dealing with DD
|
4.16 (1.00)
|
Dealing with suicidality
|
2.92 (1.37)
|
Knowledge‡
|
DD
|
3.98 (1.07)
|
Suicidality
|
2.97 (1.36)
|
†Multiple responses possible.
‡’0’ (‘not confident at all’) to ‘6’ (‘very confident’) Likert scale adapted from Morita (2007).29
Suitability and usefulness
87% of the respondents (n = 129) valued the structure of the clinical approach as ‘(very) suitable’, 95% (n = 141) rated the clinical approach to be ’(very) useful’ for everyday clinical practice.
Importance of individual domains
Table 3 displays the results of the importance ratings for Delphi round one and two.
Table 3. Clinical approach domains and Delphi survey importance ratings
|
|
Mean (Standard Deviation)
|
Consensus†
|
Round 1‡
|
Round 2§
|
p
|
Round 1
|
Round 2
|
Increase
|
A – Usage Notes
|
1. Usage notes¶
|
-
|
4.32 (0.91)5
|
-
|
-
|
92.6 %
|
-
|
B – Conversation Aspects
|
2. Actively building the relationship
|
4.64 (0.85)
|
-
|
-
|
92.6 %
|
-
|
-
|
3. Proactively addressing desire to die
|
4.01 (0.94)
|
4.16 (0.92)
|
< 0.05
|
74.5 %
|
83.2 %
|
8.7 %
|
4. Closure of discussion
|
4.62 (0.74)
|
-
|
-
|
92.6 %
|
-
|
-
|
5. After discussion
|
4.64 (0.65)
|
-
|
-
|
94.0 %
|
-
|
-
|
C – Classification, Meaning and Functions
|
6. Classification of desire to die
|
4.26 (1.0)
|
4.37 (0.80)
|
0.10
|
85.2 %
|
90.6 %
|
5.4 %
|
7. Background and meanings of desire to die
|
4.81 (0.50)
|
-
|
-
|
97.3 %
|
-
|
-
|
8. Functions of desire to die
|
4.31 (1.07)
|
4.64 (0.73)
|
< 0.01
|
83.9 %
|
95.3%
|
11.4%
|
D – (Self-)Reflection
|
9. Conscious engagement with own attitudes and emotions
|
4.77 (0.53)
|
-
|
-
|
97.3 %
|
-
|
-
|
10. Self-protection
|
4.74 (0.53)
|
-
|
-
|
96.0 %
|
-
|
-
|
E – Further Recommended Action
|
11. Further recommended action
|
4.53 (0.85)
|
4.68 (0.56)
|
0.07
|
87.9 %
|
95.3 %
|
7.4 %
|
† Likert scale items were labeled ‘5’ (‘very important’) to ‘1’ (‘very unimportant’) with the option to report ‘don’t know’ (exclusion from analysis). Consensus was assumed if participants rated domains with ‘4’ (‘quite important’) or ‘5’ (‘very important’). Percentages are quotas of all participants who answered a respective question, not of the entire sample.
‡ For all ratings the full range of possible answers was used except for ‘conscious engagement with own attitudes and emotions’ (Min = 2, Max = 5) and ‘self-protection’ (Min = 3, Max = 5).
§ For all ratings the full range of possible answers was used expect for ‘further recommended action’ (Min = 2, Max = 5).
¶ Domain added after round 1.
|
For all domains except ‘proactively addressing desire to die’, the a priori consensus criterion (≥80% agreement) was met during the first Delphi round (see Table 2). As only four domains did not reach 90% of agreement, we took reaching <90% to indicate potential for optimization and therefore asked our panelists to reevaluate all such domains (proactively addressing, classification, functions, further recommended action) in the second round. During round two, all domains except ‘proactively addressing desire to die reached an agreement ≥90%. As our panelists opposed too narrow prompts on how to address desire to die, we changed all interrogative clauses and prompts in the original draft into the instructions and circumscriptions found in the final version of the semi-structured clinical approach (see Additional File 2). Other modifications based on Delphi results are reported in Table 4.
Table 4. Modifications of the semi-structured clinical approach based on Delphi comments
Contents of comments
|
Implementation†
|
free text answers across all domains pointed to the need to provide general notes on proper usage of the clinical approach
|
added a new domain:
ð ‘usage notes’
|
suggestion on asking whether patients think about terminating life prematurely criticized as being too direct
|
added a new suggestion:
ð ‘Explore thoughts related to not wanting to live anymore’
|
clinical approach seen to be at danger of provoking checklist type of interrogation due to bullet point setup
|
changed interrogative clauses to instructions:
ð ‘
Exists or existed Explore fear of death and dying
?’
ð ‘
Exists or existed Explore thoughts related to terminating life prematurely
?’
|
complexity and changeability of desire to die in palliative patients seen to run counter to unambiguous classification
|
added a new suggestion:
ð ‘In general, keep in mind: desire to die is complex and prone to change’
|
“manipulate” in the respective function of desire to die seen to be poor choice of words
|
changed wording:
ð ‘Attempting to
manipulate influence family or health professionals’
|
“attracting attention” in the respective function of desire to die seen to be poor choice of words
|
changed wording:
ð ‘
Attracting Drawing attention to oneself and one’s trouble’
|
“treatment contracts” seen as bad practice, especially when involving handshakes for sealing the contract as it seemed to suggest “clean hands practice”
|
changed wording, rated old and new version during round 2:
ð ‘Entering into a treatment contract with handshake in cases of latent suicidality’ (32.9% agreement, M = 3.00, SD = 1.19)
ð ‘Entering into a treatment
contract with handshake agreement in cases of latent suicidality in order to win time for interventions’ (79.2% agreement, M = 4.17, SD = 0.96)
|
suggestion on passive euthanasia seen as poorly worded
|
changed wording:
ð Letting die (passive euthanasia) as a legal option (foregoing, restriction or cancellation of life sustaining and life prolonging measures)’
|
selection of therapeutic approaches listed as examples in respective suggestions seen as too narrow
|
added a new suggestion during round 2:
ð ‘Offering other (psycho-)therapeutic interventions (e.g. family therapy, psychotherapy, art therapy)’
summed up all related suggestions into one for the finalized clinical approach:
ð ‘Offering counseling or (psycho-)therapy for individuals or groups’
|
†plain text: same wording in round 1 and 2;
strikethrough: deletions; underlined: additions
|
No significant statistical differences in ratings for all domains were found among subsamples (e.g. gender, expertise, self-assessments).
Controversial Aspects
Aside from the relatively moderate agreement on ‘proactively addressing desire to die’ during the Delphi process, classifying desire to die as thoughts of terminating life prematurely, wish for assisted suicide or active euthanasia in the clinical approach was also met with concern. In the final version of the semi-structured approach, these classifications were nonetheless included but go hand in hand with introductory information that points out the broadness of the desire to die phenomenon. The introductory information in Additional file 3 shows this in more detail.