People Would Trade
Time for a Good Death
Most people would trade a few months
of life if it meant a more comfortable death, U.S. researchers
reported.
The study ties in with other research
that shows people are beginning to value a good death as much
as they do a long life, the team at the University of Pittsburgh
said.
Writing in the journal Medical
Care, Cindy Bryce and colleagues surveyed 104 people, offering
six different scenarios involving an 80-year-old man who died
after a one-month stay in an intensive care unit.
"From our research, we found that
people care a great deal about the quality of the death experience,"
said Bryce, an assistant professor of medicine.
On average, interviewees would
have been willing to trade seven months of healthy life to ensure
better quality of care in the final month of life.
"We tested the importance of good
care at the end of life by measuring whether people would be willing
to trade life expectancy and live a shorter life for better care
at the end of life. The results were overwhelming, as 75 percent
said they would trade some amount of healthy life to improve the
quality of end-of-life care," Bryce said.
The study supports a growing movement
toward hospice care and away from valiant but often painful attempts
to keep a dying person alive a bit longer.
Reference
Source 89
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