Increasing our understanding of nonphysical suffering within palliative care: A scoping review.

Maxxine Rattner
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Abstract

Objective: Nonphysical suffering is emotional, psychological, existential, spiritual, and/or social in nature. While palliative care is a discipline dedicated to the prevention and relief of suffering - both physical and nonphysical - little is known about existing research specific to nonphysical suffering within the context of palliative care. This scoping review helps to fill this gap.

Method: Three hundred and twenty-eight unique records were identified through a systematic search of three databases (MEDLINE, CINAHL, and PsycINFO). The following keywords were used: (suffering) AND (palliative OR "end of life" OR "end-of-life" OR hospice OR dying OR terminal* ill*). Thirty studies published between 1998 and 2019 met the inclusion criteria.

Results: Losses, worries, and fears comprise patients' primary sources of nonphysical suffering. Patients face numerous barriers in expressing their nonphysical suffering to healthcare providers. The idea that patients can choose how they perceive their circumstances, thereby minimizing their nonphysical suffering, is pervasive in the research. The nature of nonphysical suffering experienced by family caregivers and palliative care clinicians is revealed in the review. The unique and sensitive interplay between nonphysical suffering and both palliative sedation and requests for hastened death is also evident. Overall, seven themes can be identified: (i) patients' experiences of nonphysical suffering; (ii) patient coping mechanisms; (iii) efforts to measure nonphysical suffering; (iv) palliative sedation; (v) requests for hastened death; (vi) family suffering; and (vii) clinician suffering.

Significance of results: This is the first scoping review to map palliative care's research specific to suffering that is social, emotional, spiritual, psychological, and/or existential in nature. Its findings expand our understanding of the nature of nonphysical suffering experienced by patients, families, and palliative care clinicians. The review's findings have significant implications for front-line practice and future research.

增加我们对姑息治疗中非身体痛苦的理解:范围回顾。
目的:非物质的痛苦本质上是情感的、心理的、存在的、精神的和/或社会的。虽然姑息治疗是一门致力于预防和减轻身体和非身体痛苦的学科,但在姑息治疗的背景下,对非身体痛苦的现有研究知之甚少。这个范围审查有助于填补这一空白。方法:系统检索MEDLINE、CINAHL和PsycINFO三个数据库,鉴定出328条独特记录。使用了以下关键词:(痛苦)和(姑息治疗或“生命终结”或“生命终结”或临终关怀或临终或疾病末期)。1998年至2019年间发表的30项研究符合纳入标准。结果:损失、担忧和恐惧是患者非身体痛苦的主要来源。患者在向医疗保健提供者表达他们的非身体痛苦时面临许多障碍。病人可以选择如何看待他们的环境,从而减少他们的非身体痛苦,这种想法在研究中很普遍。在审查中揭示了家庭照顾者和姑息治疗临床医生所经历的非身体痛苦的性质。非身体痛苦与姑息性镇静和加速死亡请求之间独特而敏感的相互作用也很明显。总体而言,可以确定七个主题:(i)患者的非身体痛苦经历;(ii)患者应对机制;(iii)衡量非身体痛苦的努力;(iv)姑息性镇静;㈤请求加速死亡;(六)家庭苦难;(七)临床医生的痛苦。结果的意义:这是第一次对缓和治疗研究的范围进行综述,这些研究具体涉及社会、情感、精神、心理和/或存在性的痛苦。它的发现扩大了我们对病人、家属和姑息治疗临床医生所经历的非身体痛苦的本质的理解。该综述的发现对一线实践和未来的研究具有重要意义。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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