Good death awareness, attitudes toward advance directives and preferences for care near the end of life among hospitalized elders in long-term care hospitals

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Abstract

This study was done to examine good death awareness, attitudes toward advance directives (ADs), and preference for care near the end-of-life (PCEOL) of hospitalized elders in long-term care hospitals. Relevant characteristics were investigated as well as correlation of the variables. Methods: This descriptive research study involved 161 hospitalized elderly patients in long-term care hospitals. A self-report questionnaire was used to measure Good Death Scale, ADs Survey, PCEOL Scale, and general characteristics. Collected data were analyzed using descriptive statistics, t-test, ANOVA, and Pearson correlation with SPSS/WIN 23.0. Results: In terms of good death awareness, a significant difference was observed; in according to age (F=3.35, p=.037), payer of treatment costs (F=3.98, p=.021), mobility (F=3.97, p=.021), heard discussion about ADs (t=-3.89, p

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Kim, E., & Lee, Y. (2019). Good death awareness, attitudes toward advance directives and preferences for care near the end of life among hospitalized elders in long-term care hospitals. Journal of the Korean Academy of Fundamentals of Nursing, 26(3), 197–209. https://doi.org/10.7739/jkafn.2019.26.3.197

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