Hospice and palliative care clinicians' perceptions of posttraumatic stress disorder at end-of-life in military veterans.

IF 0.9 Q4 PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE Pub Date : 2021-10-03 DOI:10.1080/09699260.2021.1980649
Anica Pless Kaiser, Kelly O'Malley, Jennifer Moye, Anna G Etchin, Lynn Korsun, Rachel Weiskittle, Hannah Bashian, Katherine Kemp, Zachary S Sager
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Abstract

At the end of life, individuals may re-engage with earlier life trauma as they reflect on life experiences and confront their mortality. As such, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) symptoms at the end of life may worsen the quality of death experience. This is a concern for military veterans, who tend to have more trauma exposures and higher rates of PTSD, and particularly for veterans receiving care in rural areas where access to PTSD specialty services is limited. To better understand this issue, we conducted 10 focus groups with clinicians serving veterans in rural communities across five U.S. states. The aims of this project were to evaluate: (1) do hospice and palliative care providers/staff observe PTSD symptoms in veterans at the end of life? (2) if so, how are symptoms similar to and different from existing DSM-5 criteria for PTSD? We used qualitative content analysis with mixed deductive and inductive approaches to code 151 anonymized statements. Analyses found descriptions of PTSD symptoms aligned broadly with existing diagnostic nomenclature, but descriptions revealed specific presentations relevant to the end of life setting such as resistance to care, agitation, restlessness, and effects of delirium. In addition, some veterans expressed pride in service and openness to discussing military experiences. Further, clinicians noted that PTSD symptoms were relevant to family dynamics. Future research should further characterize these symptom differences through direct patient assessment and develop resources to improve quality of death experience for veterans with PTSD symptoms.

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临终关怀与缓和疗护临床医师对退伍军人生命末期创伤后应激障碍的认知
在生命的尽头,个体在反思生活经历和面对死亡时,可能会再次遭受早年的创伤。因此,生命末期的创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)症状可能会恶化死亡体验的质量。这是退伍军人的担忧,他们往往有更多的创伤暴露和更高的创伤后应激障碍发病率,尤其是在农村地区接受护理的退伍军人,那里获得创伤后应激疾病专业服务的机会有限。为了更好地理解这个问题,我们与美国五个州农村社区的退伍军人服务临床医生进行了10个焦点小组。该项目的目的是评估:(1)临终关怀和姑息治疗提供者/工作人员是否观察到退伍军人在生命末期的创伤后应激障碍症状?(2) 如果是这样,症状与现有的DSM-5 PTSD标准有何不同?我们使用定性内容分析以及演绎和归纳的混合方法来编码151个匿名语句。分析发现,对创伤后应激障碍症状的描述与现有的诊断术语大致一致,但描述揭示了与生命终结相关的具体表现,如对护理的抵抗、烦躁、不安和谵妄的影响。此外,一些退伍军人对服役感到自豪,并对讨论军事经历持开放态度。此外,临床医生注意到创伤后应激障碍症状与家庭动态有关。未来的研究应该通过直接的患者评估来进一步表征这些症状差异,并开发资源来提高有创伤后应激障碍症状的退伍军人的死亡体验质量。
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来源期刊
PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE
PROGRESS IN PALLIATIVE CARE PUBLIC, ENVIRONMENTAL & OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH-
CiteScore
2.60
自引率
11.80%
发文量
24
期刊介绍: Progress in Palliative Care is a peer reviewed, multidisciplinary journal with an international perspective. It provides a central point of reference for all members of the palliative care community: medical consultants, nurses, hospital support teams, home care teams, hospice directors and administrators, pain centre staff, social workers, chaplains, counsellors, information staff, paramedical staff and self-help groups. The emphasis of the journal is on the rapid exchange of information amongst those working in palliative care. Progress in Palliative Care embraces all aspects of the management of the problems of end-stage disease.
期刊最新文献
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