BMC Palliative Care (Nov 2024)

Perceived risk of death among patients with advanced cancer: a qualitative directed content analysis

  • Guojuan Chen,
  • Zhangxian Chen,
  • Huimin Xiao,
  • Jianwei Zheng,
  • Shangwang Yang,
  • Hong Wu

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-024-01584-3
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 1 – 7

Abstract

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Abstract Background Risk perception with respect to death is a prerequisite for patients with advanced cancer when the time comes to make medical decisions. However, the nature of death risk perception remains unclear. Method In-depth interviews were conducted with 28 patients with advanced cancer who were recruited from two hospitals and one home-based hospice in Fujian, China. Interviews were transcribed and directed content analysis applied. The Tripartite Model of Risk Perception was used as a theoretical framework. Results Patients with advanced cancer perceived their risk of death in different ways. Professional communication about death risk and data-driven risk perception were common in clinical settings. Affective influences, inherent cognition, and comparisons to others or oneself also contributed to the subjects’ self-perceived death risk. Conclusion This theory-informed qualitative study clarifies the nature of the perceived risk of death among patients with advanced cancer. The study findings offer healthcare providers a more nuanced understanding of the perceived risk of death among patients with advanced cancer.

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