Abstract

Little is known about attitudes toward advance directives and factors associated with them among emergency and palliative care nurses who often or daily face end-of-life circumstances. Thus, we aimed to compare the levels of attitudes toward advance directives, communication skills, knowledge about end-of-life care (knowledge), and awareness of the concept of a good death (good death awareness) between emergency and palliative care nurses, and to examine factors associated with attitudes toward advance directives in the total sample. In this cross-sectional, correlational study, data were collected from 153 nurses (59 emergency and 94 palliative care nurses) at three tertiary hospitals using online or offline surveys and were analyzed using t-tests and multiple linear regression analysis. The levels of attitudes, communication skills, knowledge, and good death awareness were moderate in both groups. Attitudes in emergency compared to palliative care nurses were less positive (46.78 vs. 48.38; p=.044), and knowledge was significantly lower (13.64 vs. 15.00; p=.004). Communication skills and good death awareness between the two groups were similar. In the total sample, emergency practice (B=-1.59, p=.024), and lower levels of good death awareness (B=0.30, p < .001), communication skills (B=0.18, p=.001), and education (B=-2.84, p=.015) were associated with less positive attitudes (F=9.52, p < .001; R2 =0.35). The findings demonstrate the need for improvements in attitudes, knowledge, communication skills, and good death awareness in both groups, especially emergency nurses. Two modifiable targets of interventions to improve nurses' attitudes were also noted.

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