Many
Terminally Ill Patients feel abandoned by
their Doctors
Newswise — Terminally ill patients and their
family caregivers often feel abandoned by
their doctors and feel a sense of
“unfinished business” with them, according
to a new study by an oncologist at the
Seattle Cancer Care Alliance.
The study results, published today in the
Archives of Internal Medicine, identified
two themes: before death, abandonment
worries related to loss of continuity of
communication between patient and physician;
and at the time death or after, the
patient’s family’s feelings of abandonment
from a lack of closure with the physician.
“Doctors often don’t realize how important
this issue is for patients and their
families,” said lead author Anthony Back,
M.D., an expert on patient/physician
communication.
“Something
as simple as a phone call can go a long way
toward allaying abandonment concerns,” he
said.
The study found that physicians also
reported a lack of closure when patients
died, but they did not associate this with
abandonment.
“At first glance, continuity and closure may
seem mutually exclusive but these elements
reflect different needs occurring at
different times in the dying process,” the
authors write.
“Early on, patients and family caregivers
fear that their physicians, whose expertise
and caring they have come to depend on, will
become unavailable.”
Near death or afterward, the patient’s
family may experience a lack of closure of
their physician relationship. Physicians
also report similar feelings.
“Most physicians are not consciously aware
of having abandoned their patients. Instead,
they report a lack of closure or a feeling
of unfinished business,” Back said.
The paper, “Abandonment at the End of Life
from Patient, Caregiver, Nurse and Physician
Perspectives,” contains many direct quotes
from patient and physician participants who
were asked to answer a series of questions
about their perceptions and needs about
continuity and closure.
For example, this is what one patient told
the researchers about the impending loss of
the relationship with the doctor: “I think
that it’s important that you still have that
contact with them even though there isn’t
anything they can do to make you better.”
Back and colleagues at the University of
Washington School of Medicine lay out a
simple plan for how physicians and nurses
can achieve continuity and closure before
and after a patient dies.
Before death, continuity can be achieved by
assuring patients that they will be
available to see them and by maintaining
contact, often by phone, as death
approaches.
Closure can be addressed by anticipating and
acknowledging the probable last visit with a
patient.
After a patient dies, the researchers
recommend that physicians call the family
caregiver as an act of closure.
For his own patients, Back said he schedules
appointments to see patients after they
enter hospice care or he calls them if they
are too sick to come to the office.
He also makes calls to say goodbye and talks
to family members as well.
The authors say that this study is the first
empirical research on the subject that
provides a longitudinal, prospective view
using ongoing interviews with doctors,
nurses, patients and family caregivers that
began at the time the patient had advanced
disease and continued through death and into
the beginning of bereavement.
“The significance of our study is that it
provides empirical grounding for a central
professional value of non-abandonment,” said
Back, also an affiliate member in the
Clinical Research Division at Fred
Hutchinson Cancer Research Center.
For the study, the authors recruited 31
Washington oncologists, pulmonologists and
general internists.
The doctors identified patients who were in
the late stages of cancer or severe chronic
obstructive pulmonary disease.
Fifty-five patients participated in the
study, as did 36 family members or friend
caregivers. Twenty-five nurses also were
recruited.
The National Institute of Nursing Research
funded the research.
About Seattle Cancer
Care Alliance
Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, established in
1998, unites the adult and pediatric
cancer-care services of Fred Hutchinson
Cancer Research Center, UW Medicine and
Children’s Hospital and Regional Medical
Center.
A major focus of SCCA is to speed the
transfer of new diagnostic and treatment
techniques from the research setting to the
patient bedside while providing premier,
patient-focused cancer care.
Patients
who come to SCCA receive the latest
research-based cancer therapies as well as
cutting-edge treatments for a number of
non-malignant diseases under development by
its partner organizations. SCCA has three
clinical-care sites: an outpatient clinic on
the Fred Hutchinson campus, a
pediatric-inpatient unit at Children’s and
an adult-inpatient unit at UW Medical
Center. For more information about SCCA,
visit
www.seattlecca.org.