马来西亚的急诊、姑息治疗和老年医学医生对生命末期痛苦的概念。

Annushkha Sinnathamby, Yun Ting Ong, Shu Xian Lim, Aaron Wi Han Hiew, Sing Yee Ng, Joyce Huimin Chee, Mark Kiak Min Tan, Nur Amira Binte Abdul Hamid, Simon Yew Kuang Ong, Lalit Kumar Radha Krishna
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:姑息治疗、老年病学和急诊医生都接触到死亡、绝症患者和患者及其家属的痛苦。由于医生目睹了病人的痛苦,他们很容易受到护理成本的影响——为病人提供富有同情心和同理心的护理所带来的情绪困扰。如果放任不管,这可能最终导致职业倦怠,损害职业身份。本研究旨在更好地了解不同实践环境和专业的痛苦,以指导医生和患者支持框架的设计。方法:从2023年8月至2024年9月,对马来西亚各医院的16名姑息治疗医生、12名老年科医生和13名急诊医生进行半结构化访谈。访谈记录分析使用归纳和演绎定性分析。结果:数据分析揭示了三个关键领域:(1)活得好与死得好;(2)痛苦的定义;(3)患者痛苦对医生的影响。结论:医生对美好生活和死亡的概念将他们对痛苦的概念框定在美好生活的对立面之外。人们发现,痛苦是由于失去控制、独立和尊严而产生的痛苦,以及身体、情感和生存上的痛苦。目睹病人的痛苦倾向于医生的痛苦,因为他们质疑他们的目标和角色在病人护理。我们的研究结果强调,主办机构、医院和临床部门需要在医生的护理方面投入更多资金。我们相信这些发现应该适用于许多资源有限的国家和马来西亚海岸以外的其他卫生保健专业人员。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Concepts of Suffering at the End of Life Amongst Emergency, Palliative Care and Geriatric Medicine Physicians in Malaysia.

Background: Palliative Care, Geriatrics and Emergency physicians are exposed to death, terminally ill patients and distress of patients and their families. As physicians bear witness to patients' suffering, they are vulnerable to the costs of caring-the emotional distress associated with providing compassionate and empathetic care to patients. If left unattended, this may culminate in burnout and compromise professional identity. This study aims to provide a better understanding of suffering across various practice settings and specialties to guide the design of support frameworks for physicians and their patients.

Methods: From August 2023 to September 2024, semi-structured interviews were conducted with sixteen Palliative Care, 12 Geriatrics and 13 Emergency physicians from various hospitals in Malaysia. Interview transcripts were analyzed using both inductive and deductive qualitative analyses.

Results: Data analysis revealed three key domains: (1) living and dying well, (2) definition of suffering, and (3) impact of patient suffering on physicians.

Conclusion: Physicians' concepts of a good life and death frame their notions of suffering beyond the antithesis of a good life. Suffering is found to be distress at a loss of control, independence and dignity, alongside the presence of physical, emotional and existential distress. Witnessing patient suffering predisposes to physician suffering as they question their goals and roles in patient care. Our findings underscore the need for host organizations, hospitals and clinical departments to invest more in the care of their physicians. We believe these findings ought to be applicable to many resource-limited nations and other health care professionals beyond Malaysian shores.

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