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Contextualizing attitudes toward medical aid in dying in a national sample of interdisciplinary US hospice clinicians: hospice philosophy of care, patient-centered care, and professional exposure.
- Source :
- Palliative Care & Social Practice; 12/8/2024, p1-17, 17p
- Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Background: Despite extensive theoretical debate, empirical research on medical aid in dying (MAID) largely has disregarded broader, contextual factors as potential correlates of attitudes in hospice clinicians. Objective: Informed by institutional theory and neofunctional attitude theory, the objective of the current study was to quantitatively examine hospice clinicians' attitudes toward MAID as functions of institutional characteristics relating to (Aim 1) individual adherence to hospice values and (Aim 2) state law. Design: We used a cross-sectional design. Methods: A national convenience sample of interdisciplinary hospice clinicians recruited through US professional membership associations self-administered an online survey. Measures included attitudes toward MAID, attitudes toward the hospice philosophy of care, attitudes toward the principle that hospice care should not hasten death, orientation toward patient-centeredness, professional exposure to working in a state where MAID is legal, and demographic characteristics. Data were analyzed via a partial proportional odds model. Results: The sample (N = 450) comprised hospice physicians (227 [50.4%]), nurses (64 [14.2%]), social workers (74 [16.4%]), and 85 chaplains (85 [18.9%]). Results of the partial proportional odds model indicated that professional exposure to working in a state where MAID is legal was significantly associated with over twice the cumulative odds of MAID support. Although neither orientation toward patient-centered care nor attitudes toward the hospice philosophy of care was significantly associated with attitudes toward MAID, results showed that disagreement with the narrower principle that hospice care should not hasten death was significantly associated with 6-to-7 times the cumulative odds of MAID support. Conclusion: Findings suggest that contextual factors—namely, the environments in which hospice clinicians practice—may shape attitudes toward MAID. Unanticipated results indicating that hospice professionals' adherence to hospice values was not significantly associated with attitudes toward MAID underscore the need for further research on these complex associations, given previous theoretical and empirical support. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Subjects :
- ASSISTED suicide laws
HOSPICE care -- Law & legislation
WORK
CROSS-sectional method
PROFESSIONAL ethics
STATISTICAL hypothesis testing
DATA analysis
RESEARCH funding
STATISTICAL sampling
WORK environment
QUESTIONNAIRES
KRUSKAL-Wallis Test
PHILOSOPHY of medicine
QUANTITATIVE research
CHI-squared test
DESCRIPTIVE statistics
MULTIVARIATE analysis
PATIENT-centered care
PROFESSIONS
ODDS ratio
ATTITUDES of medical personnel
CONCEPTUAL structures
ONE-way analysis of variance
STATISTICS
TERMINALLY ill
DATA analysis software
HEALTH care teams
EXPERIENTIAL learning
LEGAL compliance
GOVERNMENT regulation
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 26323524
- Database :
- Complementary Index
- Journal :
- Palliative Care & Social Practice
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 181524917
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1177/26323524241302097