Living at the end-of-life: experience of time of patients with cancer

Abstract Background The aim of this study was to gain insight into the experience of time of terminal patients with cancer. Experience of time is relevant in palliative care in both policy and practice. On a policy level, the Quality Adjusted Life Year (QALY), the most used outcome measure for cost-...

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Main Authors: Jordy Johannes Eduardus Rovers, Elze Jantien Knol, Jelte Pieksma, Wytse Nienhuis, Anne Barbara Wichmann, Yvonne Engels
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-05-01
Series:BMC Palliative Care
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12904-019-0424-7
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spelling doaj-cce38bcfffbc4cae8bf9ff9bfe8a02462020-11-25T02:25:42ZengBMCBMC Palliative Care1472-684X2019-05-011811810.1186/s12904-019-0424-7Living at the end-of-life: experience of time of patients with cancerJordy Johannes Eduardus Rovers0Elze Jantien Knol1Jelte Pieksma2Wytse Nienhuis3Anne Barbara Wichmann4Yvonne Engels5Radboud University Honours AcademyRadboud University Honours AcademyRadboud University Honours AcademyRadboud University Honours AcademyRadboud University Honours AcademyRadboud University Honours AcademyAbstract Background The aim of this study was to gain insight into the experience of time of terminal patients with cancer. Experience of time is relevant in palliative care in both policy and practice. On a policy level, the Quality Adjusted Life Year (QALY), the most used outcome measure for cost-effectiveness analysis in healthcare, assumes time to be a linear and additive variable, which is one of the reasons that its applicability in palliative care is questioned. On a practice level, a better understanding of the experience of time of patients with limited time left, could help to recognize if and how these patients can have a more meaningful use of time. The main focus of this study was to discover whether time perception of these patients in their last months of life had changed as compared to earlier periods of time in their lives in good physical health. The pace of time and time dominance (comparison of past, present and future) were investigated. Methods In several hospices and palliative care units in the Netherlands, twelve semi-structured interviews were conducted with terminal patients with cancer. Results Time perception at the end of life had changed for most participants. They all lived on a day-to-day basis in the terminal phase, independent of their way of life in the healthy phase. Furthermore, the experienced duration of a day turned out to be very different between patients, but also between days, depending on daily activities. Besides, for most patients for whom the future was the dominant period of time in the healthy phase, the dominant period of time in the terminal phase had become the past. Conclusions Time perception of terminal patients with cancer differed from the time perception in their relatively healthy phase of life. This suggests that the LY part of the QALY is not comparable for all phases of life.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12904-019-0424-7Palliative careTime perceptionPatientsQualitative research
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jordy Johannes Eduardus Rovers
Elze Jantien Knol
Jelte Pieksma
Wytse Nienhuis
Anne Barbara Wichmann
Yvonne Engels
spellingShingle Jordy Johannes Eduardus Rovers
Elze Jantien Knol
Jelte Pieksma
Wytse Nienhuis
Anne Barbara Wichmann
Yvonne Engels
Living at the end-of-life: experience of time of patients with cancer
BMC Palliative Care
Palliative care
Time perception
Patients
Qualitative research
author_facet Jordy Johannes Eduardus Rovers
Elze Jantien Knol
Jelte Pieksma
Wytse Nienhuis
Anne Barbara Wichmann
Yvonne Engels
author_sort Jordy Johannes Eduardus Rovers
title Living at the end-of-life: experience of time of patients with cancer
title_short Living at the end-of-life: experience of time of patients with cancer
title_full Living at the end-of-life: experience of time of patients with cancer
title_fullStr Living at the end-of-life: experience of time of patients with cancer
title_full_unstemmed Living at the end-of-life: experience of time of patients with cancer
title_sort living at the end-of-life: experience of time of patients with cancer
publisher BMC
series BMC Palliative Care
issn 1472-684X
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Abstract Background The aim of this study was to gain insight into the experience of time of terminal patients with cancer. Experience of time is relevant in palliative care in both policy and practice. On a policy level, the Quality Adjusted Life Year (QALY), the most used outcome measure for cost-effectiveness analysis in healthcare, assumes time to be a linear and additive variable, which is one of the reasons that its applicability in palliative care is questioned. On a practice level, a better understanding of the experience of time of patients with limited time left, could help to recognize if and how these patients can have a more meaningful use of time. The main focus of this study was to discover whether time perception of these patients in their last months of life had changed as compared to earlier periods of time in their lives in good physical health. The pace of time and time dominance (comparison of past, present and future) were investigated. Methods In several hospices and palliative care units in the Netherlands, twelve semi-structured interviews were conducted with terminal patients with cancer. Results Time perception at the end of life had changed for most participants. They all lived on a day-to-day basis in the terminal phase, independent of their way of life in the healthy phase. Furthermore, the experienced duration of a day turned out to be very different between patients, but also between days, depending on daily activities. Besides, for most patients for whom the future was the dominant period of time in the healthy phase, the dominant period of time in the terminal phase had become the past. Conclusions Time perception of terminal patients with cancer differed from the time perception in their relatively healthy phase of life. This suggests that the LY part of the QALY is not comparable for all phases of life.
topic Palliative care
Time perception
Patients
Qualitative research
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12904-019-0424-7
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