Factors underlying surrogate medical decision-making in middle eastern and east Asian women: A Q-methodology study

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Abstract

Background: It is not clear how lay people prioritize the various, sometimes conflicting, interests when they make surrogate medical decisions, especially in non-Western cultures. The extent such decisions are perspective-related is also not well documented. Methods: We explored the relative importance of 28 surrogate decision-making factors to 120 Middle-Eastern (ME) and 120 East-Asian (EA) women from three perspectives, norm-perception (N), preference as patient (P), and preference as surrogate decision-maker (S). Each respondent force-ranked (one to nine) 28 opinion-items according to each perspective. Items' ranks were analyzed by averaging-analysis and Q-methodology. Results: Respondents' mean (SD) age was 33.2 (7.9) years; all ME were Muslims, 83% of EA were Christians. "Trying everything possible to save patient,""Improving patient health,""Patient pain and suffering,"and/or "What is in the best interests of patient"were the three most-important items, whereas "Effect of caring for patient on all patients in society,""Effect of caring for patient on patients with same disease,"and/or "Cost to society from caring for patient"were among the three least-important items, in each ME and EA perspectives. P-perspective assigned higher mean ranks to family and surrogate's needs and burdens-related items, and lower mean rank to "Fear of loss"than S-perspective (p<0.001). ME assigned higher mean ranks to "Medical facts"and "Surrogate own wishes for patient"and lower mean rank to "Family needs"in all perspectives (p<0.001). Q-methodology identified models that were relatively patient's preference-, patient's religious/spiritual beliefs-, or emotion-dependent (all perspectives); medical facts-dependent (N- and S-perspectives), financial needs-dependent (P- and S-perspectives), and family needs-dependent (P-perspective). Conclusions: 1) Patient's health was more important than patient's preference to ME and EA women; society interest was least important. 2) Family and surrogate's needs/ burdens were more important, whereas fear of loss was less important to respondents as patients than as surrogate decision-makers. 3) Family needs were more important to EA than ME respondents, the opposite was true for medical facts and surrogate's wishes for patient. 4) Q-methodology models that relatively emphasized various surrogate decision-making factors overlapped the ME and EA women' three perspectives.

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Hammami, M. M., Al Balkhi, A., De Padua, S. S., & Abuhdeeb, K. (2020). Factors underlying surrogate medical decision-making in middle eastern and east Asian women: A Q-methodology study. BMC Palliative Care, 19(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-020-00643-9

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