Perception of Medical Students on the Need for End-of-Life Care: A Q-Methodology Study
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Q Methodology
2.2. The Statement Set
2.3. Study Population and Data Collection
2.4. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Study Population
3.2. Selected Profiles
3.3. Profile 1: Students Prioritizing Patient’s Wishes and Quality of Life
3.4. Profile 2: Students Believing That Life Must Be Extended Whatever the Cost
3.5. Profile 3: Students Maximizing Health Benefits and Economic Aspects
3.6. Characteristics Associated with the Profiles
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
- COVID-19: Government under Fire over Its Handling of Care Home Crisis. Express & Star. Available online: https://www.expressandstar.com/news/uk-news/2020/05/19/covid-19-government-under-fire-over-its-handling-of-care-home-crisis/ (accessed on 1 July 2020).
- Savage, M. More than Half of England’s Coronavirus-Related Deaths Will Be People from Care Homes Social Care. Guardian 2020, 7. Available online: https://www.theguardian.com/society/2020/jun/07/more-than-half-of-englands-coronavirus-related-deaths-will-be-people-from-care-homes (accessed on 1 July 2020).
- Shreves, A.; Marcolini, E. End of life/palliative care/ethics. Emerg. Med. Clin. N. Am. 2014, 32, 955–974. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Wiegand, D.L.; MacMillan, J.; Dos Santos, M.R.; Bousso, R.S. Palliative and end-of-life ethical dilemmas in the intensive care unit. AACN Adv. Crit. Care 2015, 26, 142–150. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Borsellino, P. Limitation of the therapeutic effort: Ethical and legal justification for withholding and/or withdrawing life sustaining treatments. Multidiscip. Respir. Med. 2015, 10, 5. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Derse, A.R. Limitation of Treatment at the End-of-Life: Withholding and Withdrawal. Clin. Geriatr. Med. 2005, 21, 223–238. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Kirsch, R.E.; Balit, C.R.; Carnevale, F.A.; Latour, J.M.; Larcher, V. Ethical, Cultural, Social, and Individual Considerations Prior to Transition to Limitation or Withdrawal of Life-Sustaining Therapies. Pediatr. Crit. Care Med. 2018, 19, S10–S18. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Dieleman, J.L.; Templin, T.; Sadat, N.; Reidy, P.; Chapin, A.; Foreman, K.; Haakenstad, A.; Evans, T.; Murray, C.J.L.; Kurowski, C. National spending on health by source for 184 countries between 2013 and 2040. Lancet 2016, 387, 2521–2535. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Fitzpatrick, D.; Heah, R.; Patten, S.; Ward, H. Palliative Care in Undergraduate Medical Education—How Far Have We Come? Am. J. Hosp. Palliat. Med. 2016, 345, 762–773. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Carrasco, J.; Lynch, T.; Garralda, E.; Woitha, K.; Elsner, F.; Marilene, F.; Ellershaw John, E.; Clark, D.; Centeno, C. Palliative Care Medical Education in European Universities: A Descriptive Study and Numerical Scoring System Proposal for Assessing Educational Development. J. Pain Symptom Manag. 2015, 50, 516–523. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Leppert, W.; Sesiuk, A.; Lemieszek, A.K. Current status of academic palliative medicine in Poland: A nationwide study. BMC Palliat. Care 2022, 21, 100. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Gibbins, J.; Mccoubrie, R.; Forbes, K. Why are newly qualified doctors unprepared to care for patients at the end of life? Med. Educ. 2011, 44, 389–399. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Ibrahim, H.; Lootah, S.; Satish, K.P.; Harhara, T. Medical student experiences and perceptions of palliative care in a middle eastern country. BMC Med. Educ. 2022, 22, 371. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- ANECA (Agencia Nacional de Evaluación de la Calidad y Acreditación) Libro Blanco; Título de Grado en Medicina: Granada, Spain, 2005.
- Beecroft, C. Why health economics deserves a place in the medical curriculum. J. Comp. Eff. Res. 2016, 5, 321–323. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Ashraf, M.A.; Sherwani, Y.; Najim, M.; Ahmed, M.; Rabee, R.; Al-Jibury, O.; Al-Mayahi, F.; Ahmed, A. Should basic health economics principles be taught during medical school in the UK? Med. Educ. Online 2015, 20, 29541. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Leget, C.; Hoedemaekers, R. Teaching medical students about fair distribution of healthcare resources. J. Med. Ethics 2007, 33, 737–741. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Watts, S.; Stenner, P. Doing Q Methodological Research: Theory, Method & Interpretation; SAGE Publications Ltd.: London, UK, 2012; ISBN 9781849204149. [Google Scholar]
- McKeown, B.; Thomas, D. Q Methodology; SAGE Publications, Inc.: Thousand Oaks, CA, USA, 2013; ISBN 9781452242194. [Google Scholar]
- McHugh, N.; Baker, R.M.; Mason, H.; Williamson, L.; Van Exel, J.; Deogaonkar, R.; Collins, M.; Donaldson, C. Extending life for people with a terminal illness: A moral right and an expensive death? Exploring societal perspectives. BMC Med. Ethics 2015, 16, 14. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Watts, S. Develop a Q methodological study. Educ. Prim. Care 2015, 26, 435–437. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- GitHub—Shawnbanasick/Easy-Htmlq: Q-Method Surveys in Pure HTML5. Available online: https://github.com/shawnbanasick/easy-htmlq (accessed on 17 January 2020).
- Netlify: All-in-One Platform for Automating Modern Web Projects. Available online: https://www.netlify.com/ (accessed on 17 January 2020).
- Firebase. Available online: https://firebase.google.com/ (accessed on 17 January 2020).
- Zabala, A. Qmethod: A Package to Explore Human Perspectives Using Q Methodology. R J. 2014, 6, 163. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Banasick, S. Shawnbanasick/Ken-q-Analysis: V1.0.1 (v1.0.1). Zenodo 2018. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Brown, S.R. Political Subjectivity: Applications of Q Methodology in Political Science. JMR J. Mark. Res. 1980, 19, 162. [Google Scholar]
- Zabala, A.; Sandbrook, C.; Mukherjee, N. When and how to use Q methodology to understand perspectives in conservation research. Conserv. Biol. 2018, 32, 1185–1194. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Wouters, S.; van Exel, J.; Baker, R.; Brouwer, W.B.F. Priority to End of Life Treatments? Views of the Public in the Netherlands. Value Health 2017, 20, 107–117. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- van Exel, J.; Baker, R.; Mason, H.; Donaldson, C.; Brouwer, W. Public views on principles for health care priority setting: Findings of a European cross-country study using Q methodology. Soc. Sci. Med. 2015, 126, 128–137. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Pomfret, S.; Mufti, S.; Seale, C. Medical students and end-of-life decisions: The influence of religion. Future Healthc. J. 2018, 5, 25–29. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed] [Green Version]
- Shi, H.; Shan, B.; Zheng, J.; Peng, W.; Zhang, Y.; Zhou, X.; Miao, X.; Hu, X. Knowledge and attitudes toward end-of-life care among community health care providers and its influencing factors in China. Medicine 2019, 98, e17683. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Riegelman, R. Commentary: Health Systems and Health Policy: A Curriculum for All Medical Students. Acad. Med. 2006, 81, 391–392. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Kim, D.Y.; Kim, K.J.; Shin, S.J.; Heo, D.S.; Lee, S.N.; Nam, E.M. Factors That Influence Attitudes Toward End-of-Life Care Among Medical Students: Nationwide Survey for Fourth-Year Korean Medical Students. Am. J. Hosp. Palliat. Med. 2019, 36, 460–465. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Sutherland, R. Dying Well-Informed: The Need for Better Clinical Education Surrounding Facilitating End-of-Life Conversations. Yale J. Biol. Med. 2019, 92, 757–764. [Google Scholar]
- Pohontsch, N.J.; Stark, A.; Ehrhardt, M.; Kötter, T.; Scherer, M. Influences on students’ empathy in medical education: An exploratory interview study with medical students in their third and last year. BMC Med. Educ. 2018, 18, 231. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Stolk, E.A.; Pickee, S.J.; Ament, A.H.J.A.; Busschbach, J.J.V. Equity in health care prioritisation: An empirical inquiry into social value. Health Policy 2005, 74, 343–355. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Hammel, J.F.; Sullivan, A.M.; Block, S.D.; Twycross, R. End-of-life and palliative care education for final-year medical students: A comparison of Britain and the United States. J. Palliat. Med. 2007, 10, 1356–1366. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Wilson, H.; Warmington, S.; Johansen, M.L. Experience-based learning: Junior medical students’ reflections on end-of-life care. Med. Educ. 2019, 53, 687–697. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Alminoja, A.; Piili, R.P.; Hinkka, H.; Metsänoja, R.; Hirvonen, O.; Tyynelä-Korhonen, K.; Kaleva-Kerola, J.; Saarto, T.; Kellokumpu-Lehtinen, P.-L.I.; Lehto, J.T. Does Decision-making in End-of-life Care Differ Between Graduating Medical Students and Experienced Physicians? In Vivo 2019, 33, 903–909. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [Green Version]
- Shah, K.K.; Tsuchiya, A.; Wailoo, A.J. Valuing health at the end of life: A review of stated preference studies in the social sciences literature. Soc. Sci. Med. 2018, 204, 39–50. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef] [PubMed]
- Linley, W.G.; Hughes, D.A. Societal views on nice, cancer drugs fund and value-based pricing criteria for prioritising medicines: A cross-sectional survey of 4118 adults in great britain. Health Econ. 2013, 22, 948–964. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Chim, L.; Salkeld, G.; Kelly, P.; Lipworth, W.; Hughes, D.A.; Stockler, M.R. Societal perspective on access to publicly subsidised medicines: A cross sectional survey of 3080 adults in Australia. PLoS ONE 2017, 12, e0172971. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Shiroiwa, T.; Sung, Y.K.; Fukuda, T.; Lang, H.C.; Bae, S.C.; Tsutani, K. International survey on willingness-to-pay (WTP) for one additional qaly gained: What is the threshold of cost effectiveness? Health Econ. 2010, 19, 422–437. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Pennington, M.; Baker, R.; Brouwer, W.; Mason, H.; Hansen, D.G.; Robinson, A.; Donaldson, C.; Bell, S.; Jones-Lee, M.; Wildman, J.; et al. Comparing WTP values of different types of QALY gain elicited from the general public. Health Econ. 2015, 24, 280–293. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
Variable | Category | All Respondents (143) | Respondents with Profile (121) | Respondents without Profile (22) |
---|---|---|---|---|
N (%) | N (%) | N(%) | ||
Gender | Male | 45 (31.47) | 39 (32.23) | 6 (27.27) |
Female | 98 (68.53) | 82 (67.77) | 16 (72.73) | |
Year of studies | First to third year students | 42 (29.37) | 37 (30.58) | 5 (22.73) |
Fourth to fifth-year students | 48 (33.57) | 38 (31.40) | 10 (45.45) | |
Sixth-year students | 53 (37.06) | 46 (38.02) | 7 (31.82) | |
Starting year | 2013 | 8 (5.59) | 6 (4.96) | 2 (9.09) |
2014 | 50 (34.97) | 44 (36.36) | 6 (27.27) | |
2015 | 26 (18.18) | 22 (18.18) | 4 (18.18) | |
2016 | 15 (10.49) | 11 (9.09) | 4 (18.18) | |
2017 | 19 (13.29) | 17 (14.05) | 2 (9.09) | |
2018 | 15 (10.49) | 11 (9.09) | 4 (18.18) | |
2019 | 10 (6.99) | 10 (8.26) | 0 (0.00) | |
Autonomous community | Cantabria | 78 (54.55) | 64 (52.89) | 14 (63.64) |
Asturias | 20 (13.99) | 18 (14.88) | 2 (9.09) | |
Castile and Leon | 13 (9.09) | 10 (8.26) | 3 (13.64) | |
Andalusia | 7 (4.90) | 7 (5.79) | 0 (0.00) | |
Madrid | 7 (4.90) | 6 (4.96) | 1 (4.55) | |
Basque Country | 4 (2.80) | 4 (3.31) | 0 (0.00) | |
Castile La Mancha | 4 (2.80) | 4 (3.31) | 0 (0.00) | |
Others | 10 (6.99) | 8 (6.61) | 2 (9.09) | |
Age, (mean (SD)) | 22.13 (2.68) | 21.97 (2.37) | 23.05 (3.96) |
Statement | F1 | F2 | F3 |
---|---|---|---|
1. Patients should have the right to refuse life-extending treatments if they choose. | 3 | 3 | 3* |
2. At the end of their life, patients should be cared for at home with a better quality of life rather than have aggressive and expensive treatments that will only extend life for a short period of time. | 1 | 0* | 1 |
3. If somebody wants to keep fighting until the last possible moment, they should be allowed to do so, regardless of cost. | 2 | 2 | −1* |
4. It is important to give a dying person and their family time to prepare for their death, put their affairs in order, make peace and say goodbyes. | 2 | 2 | 2 |
5. I would place more value on end-of-life treatments than many medical treatments for non-terminal conditions. | 0* | −1 | −2* |
6. Expensive drugs for people who are terminally ill and will not benefit very much are not a good use of public funding. | −2 | −1 | 0* |
7. It is human nature to want to preserve life and go on living for as long as we can—it is one of our most basic instincts. | −1* | 2* | 1 |
8. If a life-extending treatment for terminally ill patients is expensive, but the only treatment available, it should still be provided. | 1 | 1 | 0* |
9. It may not sound like much, but a few extra weeks or months might mean an awful lot to a family affected by a terminal illness. | 2 | 3* | 2 |
10. Life should only be extended if the patient’s quality of life during that time will be good. | 1 | 0* | 2 |
11. Real help and compassion should be about providing a death with dignity instead of more drugs to get a few more weeks or months out of a very sick body. | 2 | 0* | 2 |
12. A year of life is of equal value for everyone. | −2 | −1 | −3* |
13. We should spend proportionately more on patients when we feel those patients have not had their fair innings—in terms of the length of their life or the quality of that life. | 1 | 1 | 0* |
14. To extend life in a way that is beneficial to the patient is morally the right thing to do. | −1 | 0* | −2 |
15. If the means of helping someone live longer exists, it is morally wrong to deny them the treatment. | 0 | 2* | −1 |
16. Not giving access to life-extending medicine to a person with a terminal illness is the same as killing them. | −1 | 0* | −2* |
17. Treatments that are very costly in relation to their health benefits should be withheld. | −2 | −2 | −1 |
18. End-of-life drugs are not a cure, they are life-prolonging. There is no point in delaying the inevitable for a short time. | −1 | −2* | −1 |
19. Patients at the end of life will grasp any slightest hope but that is not a good reason for the NHS to provide costly treatments that may extend life by a short time. | −1 | −2* | 1* |
20. Treatments that provide a short life extension are not worth it—they are only prolonging the pain for the patient’s family/friends. | 0 | −3* | −1 |
21. Extending life for people with terminal illnesses is only postponing death. | 0* | −3* | −2 |
22. Life is sacred and if it is possible to preserve life, every effort should be made to do so. | −3 | 0* | −3 |
23. I would not want my life to be extended just for the sake of it—just keeping breathing is not life. | 3 | 1 | 3 |
24. Everyone has a right to basic healthcare but there have to be limits and expensive, end-of-life, drugs are not basic care. | −3* | −1 | 0* |
25. It is important to provide life-extending treatments to give a dying person time to reach a significant milestone, such as a family event or a personal achievement. | 0 | 1* | 1 |
26. I think life-extending treatments for people who are terminally ill are of less value as people get older. | −2 | −2 | 0* |
27. Treating people at the end of life is not going to result in big health gains but the health system should be about looking after those patients in greatest need. | 0 | 1 | 0* |
28. An objective measure of health expenditure control could be to legalize the euthanasia process. | 1 | −1* | 1 |
Profile | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Variable | Category | Profile 1: Students Prioritizing Patient’s Will and Quality of Life | Profile 2: Students Believing That Life Must Be Extended Whatever the Cost | Profile 3: Students Maximizing Health Benefits and Economic Aspects | Chi-Square | p-Value |
Year of studies | First to third year students n (%) | 9 (24.32) | 15 (40.54) | 13 (35.14) | 0.258 | |
Fourth to fifth year students n (%) | 7 (18.42) | 16 (42.11) | 15 (39.47) | 5.297 | ||
Sixth year students n (%) | 9 (19.57) | 11 (23.91) | 26 (56.52) | |||
Average grade * | 5 < 7 n (%) | 5 (15.63) | 13 (40.63) | 14 (43.75) | 0.444 | |
7–8 n (%) | 14 (25.00) | 19 (33.93) | 23 (41.07) | 3.730 | ||
>8 n (%) | 4 (16.00) | 6 (24.00) | 15 (60.00) | |||
Previous contact with terminally ill patients in clinical clerkship | none or scarce n (%) | 14 (17.50) | 28 (35.00) | 38 (47.50) | 0.634 | |
some or frequent n (%) | 7 (25.00) | 10 (35.71) | 11 (39.29) | 0.912 | ||
Lives with family | No n (%) | 12 (19.35) | 25 (40.32) | 25 (40.32) | 0.409 | |
Yes n (%) | 13 (22.03) | 17 (28.81) | 29 (49.15) | 1.787 | ||
Both parents with university studies | No n (%) | 12 (18.46) | 20 (30.77) | 33 (50.77) | 0.342 | |
Yes n (%) | 13 (23.21) | 22 (39.29) | 21 (37.50) | 2.1443 | ||
Religious beliefs | No n (%) | 22 (27.50) | 22 (27.50) | 36 (45.00) | 0.012 | |
Yes n (%) | 3 (7.32) | 20 (48.78) | 18 (43.90) | 8.888 | ||
Influence of religious beliefs in ethical principles | Never/scarce/no/not applicable/n (%) | 24 (24.74) | 26 (26.80) | 47 (48.45) | 0.001 | |
Yes/sometimes/always n (%) | 1 (4.17) | 16 (66.67) | 7 (29.17) | 14.353 | ||
Influence of personal experience with terminal patient in EoL care opinion | Never/not applicable n (%) | 12 (17.91) | 20 (29.85) | 35 (52.24) | 0.064 | |
Sometimes n (%) | 5 (15.63) | 12 (37.50) | 15 (46.88) | 8.876 | ||
Always n (%) | 8 (36.36) | 10 (45.45) | 4 (18.18) | |||
Gender | Male n (%) | 8 (20.51) | 13 (33.33) | 18 (46.15) | 0.969 | |
Female n (%) | 17 (20.73) | 29 (35.37) | 36 (43.90) | 0.062 | ||
Age (mean (sd)) | 22.42 (3.74) | 21.77 (2.15) | 21.91 (1.67) | 0.565 |
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. |
© 2022 by the authors. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Barros-Garcia-Imhof, J.; Jiménez-Alfonso, A.; Gómez-Acebo, I.; Fernández-Ortiz, M.; Alonso-Molero, J.; Llorca, J.; Gonzalez-Castro, A.; Dierssen-Sotos, T. Perception of Medical Students on the Need for End-of-Life Care: A Q-Methodology Study. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 7901. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137901
Barros-Garcia-Imhof J, Jiménez-Alfonso A, Gómez-Acebo I, Fernández-Ortiz M, Alonso-Molero J, Llorca J, Gonzalez-Castro A, Dierssen-Sotos T. Perception of Medical Students on the Need for End-of-Life Care: A Q-Methodology Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(13):7901. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137901
Chicago/Turabian StyleBarros-Garcia-Imhof, Jorge, Andrés Jiménez-Alfonso, Inés Gómez-Acebo, María Fernández-Ortiz, Jéssica Alonso-Molero, Javier Llorca, Alejandro Gonzalez-Castro, and Trinidad Dierssen-Sotos. 2022. "Perception of Medical Students on the Need for End-of-Life Care: A Q-Methodology Study" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 13: 7901. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137901
APA StyleBarros-Garcia-Imhof, J., Jiménez-Alfonso, A., Gómez-Acebo, I., Fernández-Ortiz, M., Alonso-Molero, J., Llorca, J., Gonzalez-Castro, A., & Dierssen-Sotos, T. (2022). Perception of Medical Students on the Need for End-of-Life Care: A Q-Methodology Study. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(13), 7901. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137901