Abstract
Background/Aim: Appropriate decision-making in end-of-life (EOL) care is essential for both junior and senior physicians. The aim of this study was to compare the decision-making and attitudes of medical students with those of experienced general practitioners (GP) regarding EOL-care. Materials and Methods: A questionnaire presenting three cancer patient scenarios concerning decisions and ethical aspects of EOL-care was offered to 500 Finnish GPs and 639 graduating medical students in 2015-2016. Results: Responses were received from 222 (47%) GPs and 402 (63%) students. The GPs withdrew antibiotics (p<0.001) and nasogastric tubes (p=0.007) and withheld resuscitation (p<0.001), blood transfusions (p=0.002) and pleural drainage (p<0.001) more often than did the students. The students considered euthanasia and assisted suicide less reprehensible (p<0.001 in both) than did the GPs. Conclusion: Medical students were more unwilling to withhold and withdraw therapies in EOL-care than were the GPs, but the students considered euthanasia less reprehensible. Medical education should include aspects of decision-making in EOL-care.
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Alminoja, A., Piili, R. P., Hinkka, H., Metsänoja, R., Hirvonen, O., Tyynelä-Korhonen, K., … Lehto, J. T. (2019). Does Decision-making in End-of-life Care Differ between Graduating Medical Students and Experienced Physicians? In Vivo, 33(3), 903–909. https://doi.org/10.21873/invivo.11557
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