Abstract

Objective. The development of a tool to guide the psychosocial and spiritual attention for patients and their families in advanced disease (AD) at the end of life (EoL). To analyze the tool’s content from some preliminary results. Method. The initial tool design has been done starting from the results obtained in the framework of advance care planning research at the end of life (*). The tool has been implemented under supervision of the health team personnel previously trained in the use of the tool. The quantitative analysis was performed using the exploratory factorial analysis technique. The qualitative analysis of free association words has been conducted following the principles of constant comparative method based on Grounded theory methodology(1). Sample. A total of 115 cases (patients and main caregivers) in situation of AD at EoL were selected from health assistant resources, 65 out of which were patients/residents and 47 relatives. All cases fulfill the condition of having functional competence towards the understanding and the answer to the tool. Results. The tool consists of 17 items. Sixteen of them have a Likert-type scale response and one has a “free association words” format response. The exploratory content analysis allows us to identify four dimensions in the meaning of the AD at EoL: “Significant Meeting, Redemption, Resilience and Resignification”. Conclusions. Four areas of psychosocial/spiritual intervention are proposed in order to detect existential-meaning sources during the AD. Practical implications for preventing exis­tential suffering, demoralization syndrome and pathological bereavement at the EoL are.

Highlights

  • The initial tool design has been done starting from the results obtained in the framework of advance care planning research at the end of life

  • The tool has been implemented under supervision of the health team personnel previously trained in the use of the tool

  • The qualitative analysis of free association words has been conducted following the principles of constant comparative method based on Grounded theory methodology[1]

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Summary

Objective

The development of a tool to guide the psychosocial and spiritual attention for patients and their families in advanced disease (AD) at the end of life (EoL). To analyze the tool’s content from some preliminary results. The initial tool design has been done starting from the results obtained in the framework of advance care planning research at the end of life. The qualitative analysis of free association words has been conducted following the principles of constant comparative method based on Grounded theory methodology[1]. A total of 115 cases (patients and main caregivers) in situation of AD at EoL were selected from health assistant resources, 65 out of which were patients/residents and 47 relatives. All cases fulfill the condition of having functional competence towards the understanding and the answer to the tool

Results
Conclusions
Pare Jofré
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