Abstract

Cognitive prognostic awareness (PA) and emotional preparedness for death are distinct but related concepts that have rarely been investigated conjointly and without considering the dynamic nature of death preparedness. To fill this gap, this secondary-analysis study identified distinct patterns/states of death preparedness and their changes within cancer patients' last 6 months. Distinct death-preparedness states, determined by conjoint cognitive PA and emotional preparedness for death, as well as their changes between consecutive times were identified and estimated, respectively, by latent transition modeling with hidden Markov modeling among 383 cancer patients within their last 6 months. Four death-preparedness states (prevalence) were initially identified: no death preparedness (17.1%), cognitive death preparedness only (23.3%), emotional death preparedness only (39.9%), and sufficient death preparedness (19.7%). Patients in the no-death-preparedness state had neither accurate PA nor adequate emotional preparedness for death. The sufficient-death-preparedness state was characterized by both accurate PA and adequate emotional preparedness for death. In the cognitive- and emotional-death-preparedness-only states, patients were accurately aware of their prognosis and adequately emotionally prepared for their forthcoming death only, respectively. As death approached, state prevalence fluctuated within a narrow range for the no- and sufficient-death-preparedness states, whereas prevalence of cognitive- and emotional-death-preparedness-only states increased and decreased substantially, respectively. Cancer patients heterogeneously experienced conjoint cognitive PA and emotional preparedness for death, and prevalence of death-preparedness states changed substantially as death approached. Effective interventions are warranted to cultivate cognitive PA and facilitate emotional death-preparedness to improve end-of-life-care quality, thereby helping patients achieve a good death.

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