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      How Death Anxiety Impacts Nurses’ Caring for Patients at the End of Life: A Review of Literature

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          Abstract

          Nurses are frequently exposed to dying patients and death in the course of their work. This experience makes individuals conscious of their own mortality, often giving rise to anxiety and unease. Nurses who have a strong anxiety about death may be less comfortable providing nursing care for patients at the end of their life. This paper explores the literature on death anxiety and nurses’ attitudes to determine whether fear of death impacts on nurses’ caring for dying patients. Fifteen quantitative studies published between 1990 and 2012 exploring nurses’ own attitudes towards death were critically reviewed. Three key themes identified were: i). nurses’ level of death anxiety; ii). death anxiety and attitudes towards caring for the dying, and iii). death education was necessary for such emotional work. Based on quantitative surveys using valid instruments, results suggested that the level of death anxiety of nurses working in hospitals in general, oncology, renal, hospice care or in community services was not high. Some studies showed an inverse association between nurses’ attitude towards death and their attitude towards caring for dying patients. Younger nurses consistently reported stronger fear of death and more negative attitudes towards end-of-life patient care. Nurses need to be aware of their own beliefs. Studies from several countries showed that a worksite death education program could reduce death anxiety. This offers potential for improving nurses’ caring for patients at the end of their life.

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          Most cited references38

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          Fear and fitness: An evolutionary analysis of anxiety disorders

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            Death anxiety and attitudes toward the elderly among older adults: the role of gender and ethnicity.

            The article investigated the relationship between death anxiety, attitudes toward older adults, and personal anxiety toward one's own aging in a group of 197 older men and women. As predicted, negative attitudes toward other older adults were predicted by personal anxieties about aging and death, and, more specifically, fear of the unknown. In addition, several distinctive anxieties were noted for particular subgroups of respondents. Older women scored higher on the Fear of the Dead subscale of the Multidimensional Fear of Death Scale (MFODS) than did men. Caucasian participants displayed higher Fear of the Dying Process than did older African American participants. Lastly, older African American participants reported higher levels of death anxiety on 3 of the subscales of the Multidimensional Fear of Death Scale (Fear of the Unknown, Fear of Conscious Death, and Fear for the Body after Death) when compared with older Caucasian participants and also tended to accord less social value to the elderly. These findings are interpreted in terms of patterns of socialization, and their implications for end-of-life care preferences are noted.
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              Assessing nurses' attitudes toward death and caring for dying patients in a comprehensive cancer center.

              To assess how nurses employed in a comprehensive cancer center feel about death and caring for dying patients and examine any relationships between their attitudes and demographic factors. Descriptive quantitative. A 432-bed comprehensive cancer center in New York, NY. A convenience sample of 355 inpatient and outpatient oncology nurses. Voluntary and anonymous completion of the Frommelt Attitude Toward Care of the Dying (FATCOD), the Death Attitude Profile-Revised (DAP-R), and a demographic questionnaire. Years of total nursing experience, years employed at the cancer center, previous experience with caring for dying patients, age, gender, and attitudes toward death and caring for dying patients. Statistically significant relationships were noted among age, nursing experience, previous experience with caring for terminally ill patients, and scores on the FATCOD and DAP-R. Nursing experience and age were the variables most likely to predict nurses' attitudes toward death and caring for dying patients. RNs with more work experience tended to have more positive attitudes toward death and caring for dying patients. Based on the data collected in the study, less experienced oncology nurses will most likely benefit from increased education, training, and exposure to providing and coping effectively with end-of-life care.

                Author and article information

                Journal
                Open Nurs J
                Open Nurs J
                TONURSJ
                The Open Nursing Journal
                Bentham Open
                1874-4346
                24 January 2013
                2013
                : 7
                : 14-21
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Monash University, Faculty of Medicine, Nursing and Health Sciences, Melbourne, VIC 3168, Australia
                [2 ]Lancaster University, Faculty of Health & Medicine, Lancaster, UK
                Author notes
                [* ]Address correspondence to this author at the Monash University 100 Clyde Rd Berwick, VIC Aust 3806, Australia; Tel: +61 3 99047159; E-mail: robyn.cant@ 123456monash.edu
                Article
                TONURSJ-7-14
                10.2174/1874434601307010014
                3565229
                23400515
                087f38dd-88ec-46bc-9d24-0ffdd622492f
                © Peters et al.; Licensee Bentham Open.

                This is an open access article licensed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/) which permits unrestricted, non-commercial use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the work is properly cited.

                History
                : 8 October 2012
                : 26 November 2012
                : 27 November 2012
                Categories
                Article

                Nursing
                attitudes,death anxiety,end of life care,spirituality,thanatophobia.
                Nursing
                attitudes, death anxiety, end of life care, spirituality, thanatophobia.

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