MetaTOC stay on top of your field, easily

Preferences regarding disclosure of prognosis and end-of-life care: A survey of cancer patients with advanced disease in a lower-middle-income country

, , , , ,

Palliative Medicine: The Research Journal of the EAPC - A Multiprofessional Journal

Published online on

Abstract

Background:

Cancer patients’ preferences regarding disclosure of prognosis and end-of-life care remain under-reported from low- and middle-income countries where cancer poses an increasing demand on scarce healthcare resources. A better knowledge of these preferences can help in achievement of shared treatment goals.

Aim:

To survey preferences of adult cancer patients regarding disclosure of prognosis and end-of-life care

Design:

A multidimensional questionnaire was developed to survey consecutively sampled patients. A fifth of the participants completed a repeat survey 3 months later.

Setting/participants:

Adult patients at a specialist cancer center in Pakistan.

Results:

In total, 520 patients were surveyed initially (participation rate 98.6%) and 100 completed the repeat survey. Three in five respondents wanted a healthcare provider to give them detailed information about their prognosis and life expectancy. Those who wanted information withheld were significantly more likely to be female, to have a lower socioeconomic status, or to have lung cancer. Only two in five patients agreed that they wanted to die at home and more than 90% wanted all possible care till end-of-life. Yet, a little over half also agreed that they did not wish to be placed on a ventilator. In rank ordering preferences about end-of-life, respondents ranked "religious wellbeing" as the highest and "avoiding inappropriate prolongation of dying" as the lowest of six options.

Conclusion:

A majority of adult cancer patients surveyed in this study wanted a truthful disclosure about their disease prognosis and expressed a preference for hospital-based care at end-of-life. Healthcare providers should find ways to tailor prognostic information to patients’ expressed information needs.