Attitudes toward End-of-Life Resuscitation: A Psychometric Evaluation of a Novel Attitude Scale
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Aim
3. Methods
3.1. The Developmental Stage
3.2. The Psychometric Validation
3.3. Ethical Considerations
4. Results
4.1. Participant Characteristics
4.2. EFA and Reliability Analysis
4.3. The Scores of the Attitude toward End-of-Life Resuscitation
4.4. Association of the Total Attitude Scale and Three Factors’ Scores with the Intention to Discuss the End-of-Life CPR/DNR Orders
5. Discussion
6. Future Lines of Research and Practical Applications
7. Limitations of the Study
8. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variable | Mean | ±SD |
---|---|---|
Age (years, mean ± standard deviation) | 74.5 | ±10.1 |
60–<75 (n, %) | 63 | (59.4) |
≥75 | 43 | (40.6) |
Sex (n, %) | ||
Female | 56 | (52.8) |
Male | 50 | (47.2) |
Inpatient department (n, %) | ||
Medicine | 52 | (49.1) |
Surgery | 54 | (50.9) |
Education attainment (n, %) | ||
≤6 years | 65 | (61.3) |
>6 years | 41 | (38.7) |
Charlson Comorbidity Index (n, %) | ||
<1 | 45 | (42.5) |
≥1 | 61 | (57.5) |
Participate in medical decision-making during hospitalization (n, %) | ||
No | 52 | (49.1) |
Yes | 54 | (50.9) |
Death of a family member or close friend in a recent year (n, %) | ||
No | 71 | (67.0) |
Yes | 35 | (33.0) |
Heard of CPR/DNR order (n, %) | ||
No | 38 | (35.8) |
Yes | 68 | (64.2) |
Intention to discuss the end-of-life CPR/DNR decisions (n, %) | ||
No | 41 | (38.7) |
Yes | 65 | (61.3) |
Signing of an DNR order or other advance decision form | ||
No | 96 | (90.6) |
Yes | 10 | (9.4) |
Mean | ±SD | Factor 1 | Factor 2 | Factor 3 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Factor 1: Stress, avoidance, or ignorance a | |||||
1. I feel stressed when I discuss CPR or intubation at the end of life. | 3.26 | ±1.12 | 0.841 | ||
2. It is far too early to discuss whether I should undergo CPR or intubation at the end of my life. | 3.30 | ±1.06 | 0.780 | ||
3. At the end of my life, it will be better to let others decide whether I receive CPR or intubation. | 3.63 | ±1.06 | 0.763 | ||
4. Whether to receive CPR or intubation at the end of my life may bring me misfortune. | 3.27 | ±1.16 | 0.749 | ||
5. At the end of life, deciding whether a patient undergoes CPR is the responsibility of their family members. | 3.46 | ±1.07 | 0.720 | ||
6. If someone signs a DNR order, they can revoke the decision at the end of their life. | 3.13 | ±1.16 | 0.718 | ||
7. If someone signs a DNR order, physicians will not treat the individual when he/she is severely ill. | 3.19 | ±1.10 | 0.711 | ||
8. Even if I don’t make the decision of end-of-life CPR/DNR, there will be a way when the time comes | 3.03 | 1.02 | 0.644 | ||
Factor 2: Peaceful death | |||||
9. At the end of life, a DNR order would allow me to pass away peacefully and with dignity. | 4.16 | ±0.82 | 0.814 | ||
10. At the end of life, CPR is spiritual torture. | 4.20 | ±0.81 | 0.805 | ||
11. At the end of life, a person must die painlessly with their body intact | 4.15 | ±0.75 | 0.791 | ||
12. At the end of life, CPR merely prolongs the dying process and has no meaningful effect. | 4.02 | ±0.87 | 0.761 | ||
13. At the end of life, CPR worsens pain. | 4.22 | ±0.77 | 0.752 | ||
14. At the end of life, I will let destiny run its course. | 4.07 | ±0.85 | 0.701 | ||
Factor 3: Self-determination and ambivalence | |||||
15. I can comfortably discuss whether I should undergo CPR at the end of my life with my family. | 3.55 | ±0.98 | 0.872 | ||
16. I can comfortably discuss whether I should undergo CPR at the end of my life with my doctor. | 3.58 | ±0.94 | 0.855 | ||
17. If I make end-of-life decisions in advance, I will not be a burden to others | 3.84 | ±0.79 | 0.793 | ||
18. If I have a DNR order and am intubated or resuscitated, physicians can extubate or stop CPR. | 3.75 | ±0.79 | 0.630 | ||
Explained variance (%) | 28.57 | 24.50 | 9.85 | ||
Cronbach’s alpha (total Cronbach’s alpha: 0.845) | 0.885 | 0.879 | 0.857 |
Number of Items | Mean | SD | p-Value a | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Average of overall attitude score | 18 | 3.66 | ±0.50 | <0.001 * |
Factor 1: Stress, avoidance, or ignorance a | 8 | 3.29 | ±0.81 | <0.001 * |
Factor 2: Peaceful death | 6 | 4.14 | ±0.64 | 0.032 * |
Factor 3: Self-determination and ambivalence | 4 | 3.68 | ±0.74 | <0.001 * |
Univariate Analysis | Multiple Analysis | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Variables | OR | (95% CI) | p-Value | AOR | (95% CI) | p-Value |
Overall attitude score | 5.08 | (1.91–13.49) | 0.001 * | |||
Factor 1: Stress, avoidance, and ignorance a | 2.25 | (1.29–3.94) | 0.004 * | 2.22 | (1.26–3.93) | 0.006 * |
Factor 2: Peaceful death | 1.48 | (0.80–2.75) | 0.210 | 1.28 | (0.62–2.64) | 0.500 |
Factor 3: Self-determination and ambivalence | 1.93 | (1.09–3.41) | 0.023 * | 1.64 | (0.87–3.11) | 0.129 |
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Chiu, A.-F.; Huang, C.-H.; Chiu, C.-F.; Hsieh, C.-M. Attitudes toward End-of-Life Resuscitation: A Psychometric Evaluation of a Novel Attitude Scale. Healthcare 2023, 11, 2618. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11192618
Chiu A-F, Huang C-H, Chiu C-F, Hsieh C-M. Attitudes toward End-of-Life Resuscitation: A Psychometric Evaluation of a Novel Attitude Scale. Healthcare. 2023; 11(19):2618. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11192618
Chicago/Turabian StyleChiu, Aih-Fung, Chin-Hua Huang, Chun-Fung Chiu, and Chun-Man Hsieh. 2023. "Attitudes toward End-of-Life Resuscitation: A Psychometric Evaluation of a Novel Attitude Scale" Healthcare 11, no. 19: 2618. https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare11192618