Perceptions of Quality-of-life Advocates in a Southeast Asian Society

In family-centric societies, maintenance of hope amongst ill family members is a pivotal duty of the family. Meeting this duty often takes the form of continuing treatment even when such options may be futile. This makes efforts to maximize quality-of-life options challenging. We explore Singaporean...

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Veröffentlicht in:Diversity and equality in health and care 2017, Vol.14 (2), p.69-75
Hauptverfasser: Radha Krishna, Lalit Kumar, Jia Yu Lee, Rachel, Shin Wei Sim, Dorset, Tay, Keson, Menon, Sumytra, Kanesvaran, Ravindran
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:In family-centric societies, maintenance of hope amongst ill family members is a pivotal duty of the family. Meeting this duty often takes the form of continuing treatment even when such options may be futile. This makes efforts to maximize quality-of-life options challenging. We explore Singaporean perceptions surrounding quality-of-life advocates who advice quality-of-life measures over potentially life-prolonging treatment in terminal illness using a novel video vignette based semi-structured interviews. Findings suggest that quality-of-life advocates are viewed as failing in their filial obligations and perceived as 'selfish', 'money-minded' and 'immoral'. These findings highlight the need to educate patients and caregivers about quality-of-life approaches. [MEDIUM] References
ISSN:2049-5471
2049-5471
DOI:10.21767/2049-5471.100095