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This study aims to explore the attitudes and behaviors of nurses working in surgical intensive care units (ICUs) towards end-of-life care, alongside identifying the barriers they face in providing such care. Despite the universal need for end-of-life care, with an estimated 56.8 million people requiring it annually, only a fraction receive adequate services. The concept of a "good death" has evolved, now emphasizing patient and family wishes, and aligning with clinical, cultural, and ethical standards. In the U.S., a significant portion of deaths occur in hospitals, often involving surgical interventions in the final stages of life. Nurses in ICUs play a crucial role in delivering end-of-life care, making their attitudes and behaviors pivotal to the quality of care provided. Previous studies have indicated a positive correlation between nurses' attitudes towards end-of-life care and their ethical conduct in care delivery. However, research specifically focusing on surgical ICU nurses and the challenges they encounter in end-of-life care is limited. This study seeks to fill that gap, enhancing understanding of the factors that influence end-of-life care in surgical ICUs and potentially guiding improvements in care practices and policy.
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End-of-life care aims to meet the physical, psychological, social, and spiritual needs of patients approaching death and their families, helping people live as well as possible until death, supporting decision-making about the last months of life, and ensuring a dignified death (Filiz 2017). It also encompasses support provided to the family during the illness and care after death to facilitate a healthier grieving process (Karakaya 2020). Every year, an estimated 56.8 million people require end-of-life care, of which 25.7 million are in their last year of life, yet only 14% receive this care (WHO 2020). Everyone has the right to die in peace, just as they have the right to live in peace. The concept of a good death has evolved from being perceived in the past based on different parameters, such as dying at home, dying without pain, dying in a hospital, or dying accompanied by religious rituals (Uğur 2020), to being generally perceived today as a death that is in accordance with the wishes of patients and their families; and is compatible with clinical, cultural, and ethical standards (Granda-Cameron 2012).
In the United States, approximately 2.5 million people die each year, with more than 60% of these deaths occurring in hospitals, and about half of those dying in hospitals do so within three days of admission to an intensive care unit (Cicarello 2003). Surgical intervention is a common practice in the final stages of life, especially among hospitalized patients, with an estimated one-third of patients undergoing surgery in the last month of their life (Taylor 2017). A study conducted by Özkan and Şahinoğlu in 2009 in Turkey found that the one-year mortality rate in the surgical intensive care unit of a university hospital was 46% (Özkan 2009).
Nurses are responsible for the care of patients in the dying process in intensive care units. Therefore, nurses working in intensive care units can encounter death at any moment (Yılmaz 2015). In this context, end-of-life care, which includes the patient and their family, is a natural element of intensive care nursing (Filiz 2017).
An attitude is the storage in the mind of feelings, thoughts, and tendencies towards an object (Yavuz Karamanoğlu 2022). Behavior is the actions and reactions shown by an individual in response to situations (Cengiz 2020). Nurses are influenced by their individual attitudes and behaviors while practicing their profession. The attitudes and personal characteristics of nurses affect their professional competence (Karahan 2018). Therefore, the attitudes and behaviors of nurses towards end-of-life care can affect the quality of life, decision-making processes, and coping skills with death of patients and their families. A study showed that the attitudes and behaviors of intensive care nurses towards end-of-life care are positively related to their ethical attitudes in the care process (Efil 2023). Another study found that nurses' attitudes and behaviors affect their levels of clinical decision-making (Erzincanlı 2021). A strong positive relationship was found between nurses' attitudes and behaviors towards end-of-life care and their personal development, with self-actualized nurses having more positive attitudes and behaviors towards end-of-life care (Cengiz 2020).
Another factor determining the quality and effectiveness of end-of-life care in intensive care is the barriers to end-of-life care. These barriers can be related to the patient or family members, such as communication problems, religious beliefs and cultural differences, emotional and psychological stress experienced by family members. Institutional factors can also affect the effectiveness of end-of-life care, such as restricted family access to intensive care or lack of procedures related to end-of-life care. In addition, clinician-related factors are important, such as inadequate communication skills, unrealistic expectations about prognosis, or stress can affect the quality of end-of-life care (Friedenberg 2011; Xu 2022).
Therefore, identifying the attitudes and behaviors of intensive care nurses towards end-of-life care can be effective in understanding and solving problems that arise in nurses' clinical decision-making processes, the quality of care provided to patients and their families, and ethical issues in end-of-life care practices. Identifying educational and research needs in this area will also be beneficial in developing nurses' decision-making abilities and increasing their levels of dealing with ethical challenges. Additionally, identifying barriers to end-of-life care; can facilitate the reduction of these barriers and the implementation of measures in clinics.
The literature review shows studies examining factors affecting end-of-life care in intensive care, nurses' decision-making processes, ethical issues, and factors related to nurses (Erzincanlı 2021; Cicarello 2003; Yılmaz 2015; Kuşlu 2019; Ranse 2012; Harris 2014; Fridh 2014). However, the number of studies examining the attitudes and behaviors of nurses working in surgical intensive care towards end-of-life care and the barriers to end-of-life care is quite limited. The aim of this study is to examine the attitudes and behaviors of surgical intensive care nurses towards end-of-life care and the barriers to end-of-life care.
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Aynur Dr KOYUNCU; islam RA ELAGÖZ, MsC
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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