Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Filter by Categories
Abstract
Abstracts
Acute Palliative Care Case Series: Case 1
Acute Palliative Care Case Series: Case 2
Acute Palliative Care Case Series: Case 3
Addendum
Brief Communication
Case Report
Case Series
Commentary
Conference Abstract
Conference Editorial
Conference Proceedings
Current Issue
Editorial
Editorial Commentaries
Editorial Commentary
Erratum
General Medicine Original Article
General Medicine, Case Report
General Medicine, Review Article
IAPCONKochi 2019 Conference Proceedings
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letters to Editor
Media & News
Narrative Review
Notice of Retraction
Oral Abstracts
Oral Presentation
Oral Presentation: Awards
Original Article
Palliative Medicine Commentary
Palliative Medicine, Letter to Editor
Palliative Medicine, Letter to the Editor
Palliative Medicine, Original Article
Palliative Medicine, Review Article
Personal Reflection
Perspective
Perspectives
Position Paper
Position Statement
Poster Abstracts
Poster Presentation
Poster Presentation: Awards
Practitioner Section
Report
REPUBLICATION: Special Article (Guidelines)
Retraction
Review Article
Reviewers 2023
Short Communication
Short Report
Special Editorial
Special Review
Systematic Review
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Filter by Categories
Abstract
Abstracts
Acute Palliative Care Case Series: Case 1
Acute Palliative Care Case Series: Case 2
Acute Palliative Care Case Series: Case 3
Addendum
Brief Communication
Case Report
Case Series
Commentary
Conference Abstract
Conference Editorial
Conference Proceedings
Current Issue
Editorial
Editorial Commentaries
Editorial Commentary
Erratum
General Medicine Original Article
General Medicine, Case Report
General Medicine, Review Article
IAPCONKochi 2019 Conference Proceedings
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letters to Editor
Media & News
Narrative Review
Notice of Retraction
Oral Abstracts
Oral Presentation
Oral Presentation: Awards
Original Article
Palliative Medicine Commentary
Palliative Medicine, Letter to Editor
Palliative Medicine, Letter to the Editor
Palliative Medicine, Original Article
Palliative Medicine, Review Article
Personal Reflection
Perspective
Perspectives
Position Paper
Position Statement
Poster Abstracts
Poster Presentation
Poster Presentation: Awards
Practitioner Section
Report
REPUBLICATION: Special Article (Guidelines)
Retraction
Review Article
Reviewers 2023
Short Communication
Short Report
Special Editorial
Special Review
Systematic Review
Generic selectors
Exact matches only
Search in title
Search in content
Post Type Selectors
Filter by Categories
Abstract
Abstracts
Acute Palliative Care Case Series: Case 1
Acute Palliative Care Case Series: Case 2
Acute Palliative Care Case Series: Case 3
Addendum
Brief Communication
Case Report
Case Series
Commentary
Conference Abstract
Conference Editorial
Conference Proceedings
Current Issue
Editorial
Editorial Commentaries
Editorial Commentary
Erratum
General Medicine Original Article
General Medicine, Case Report
General Medicine, Review Article
IAPCONKochi 2019 Conference Proceedings
Letter to Editor
Letter to the Editor
Letters to Editor
Media & News
Narrative Review
Notice of Retraction
Oral Abstracts
Oral Presentation
Oral Presentation: Awards
Original Article
Palliative Medicine Commentary
Palliative Medicine, Letter to Editor
Palliative Medicine, Letter to the Editor
Palliative Medicine, Original Article
Palliative Medicine, Review Article
Personal Reflection
Perspective
Perspectives
Position Paper
Position Statement
Poster Abstracts
Poster Presentation
Poster Presentation: Awards
Practitioner Section
Report
REPUBLICATION: Special Article (Guidelines)
Retraction
Review Article
Reviewers 2023
Short Communication
Short Report
Special Editorial
Special Review
Systematic Review
View/Download PDF

Translate this page into:

Letters to Editor
21 (
1
); 121-121
doi:
10.4103/0973-1075.150205

Preference of the Place of Death

Department of Medical Science, Medical Center, Shantou, China
Department of Tropical Medicine, Hainan Medical University, Hainan, China

Address for correspondence: Prof. SimSai Tin; E-mail: simsaitin@gmail.com

Licence

This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

Disclaimer:
This article was originally published by Medknow Publications & Media Pvt Ltd and was migrated to Scientific Scholar after the change of Publisher.

Sir,

The report on “Preference of the place of death” is very interesting.[1] Kulkarni et al. noted that “majority of people surveyed by us, prefer to die at home, where they are relatively more comfortable.[1]” We would like to share our ideason this topic. According to a recent Chinese report, “home” is also the most preferred place of death.[2] Gu et al. also reported that “patients who lived in rural area, with lower education level and lived with relatives, expressed more preference to die at home.[2]“Another study from Taiwan, China, also reported that the terminally ill patients preferred to “die at home.[3]” Hence, there is no doubt that “die at home” seems to be the common preference of the terminally ill patients. Nevertheless, “dying in a favorite place” was not much of a concernfor Chinese patients, according to the perception of their health care providers.[3] Finally, it should also be noted that information on the preferred place of death might sometimes not be available from the patient,[4] but can be available from the relatives. Chen et al. noted that “family members knew the participant's preference for place of death[3]” was the main determinant that the patient expressed for preference to die at home. For those cases, De Roo et al. suggested using information from relatives.[5] It should be the role of the palliative care provider to seek information regarding the patient's preference and to “tailor effective interventions to help patients die at their place of preference.[6]” To manage the preference of the patient, the physician in charge has to work and collaborate with the patient-family caregiver.[7] It should be noted that not all patients’ relatives agree on the preferredplace of death,[7] and this is the issue for manipulation. “Caregiving burden of family caregivers” has to be well managed, and the social welfare support should be provided if required.[8] In fact, a report from Japan noted that support from family physician is also the main factor for terminally ill patients to prefer to die at home.[6]

REFERENCES

  1. , , , , . Preference of the place of death among people of Pune. Indian J Palliat Care. 2014;20:101-6.
    [Google Scholar]
  2. , , , , , . The preference of place of death and its predictors among terminally ill patients with cancer and their caregivers in China. Am J Hosp Palliat Care Jul 2014 Jul 9 Epub ahead of print
    [Google Scholar]
  3. , , , , . Determinants of preference for home death among terminally ill patients with cancer in Taiwan: A cross-sectional survey study. J Nurs Res. 2014;22:37-44.
    [Google Scholar]
  4. , , , , . Preference of Chinese general public and healthcare providers for a good death. Nurs Ethics 2014 May 30 Epub ahead of print
    [Google Scholar]
  5. , , , , , , . Actual and preferred place of death of home-dwelling patients in four European countries: Making sense of quality indicators. PLoS One. 2014;9:e93762.
    [Google Scholar]
  6. , , , , . Determinants of patient-family caregiver congruence on preferredplace of death in Taiwan. J Pain Symptom Manage. 2010;40:235-45.
    [Google Scholar]
  7. , , , , , , . Determinants of the place of death among terminally ill cancer patients under home hospice care in Japan. Palliat Med. 2003;17:445-53.
    [Google Scholar]
  8. , , , , , , . Patient awareness of prognosis, patient-family caregiver congruence on the preferredplace of death, and caregiving burden of families contribute to the quality of life for terminally ill cancer patients in Taiwan. Psychooncology. 2008;17:1202-9.
    [Google Scholar]

    Fulltext Views
    49

    PDF downloads
    14
    View/Download PDF
    Download Citations
    BibTeX
    RIS
    Show Sections