
Kathleen Boström- Master of Science
- Research Assistant at University of Cologne
Kathleen Boström
- Master of Science
- Research Assistant at University of Cologne
PhD Student
About
27
Publications
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Citations
Introduction
Skills and Expertise
Current institution
Additional affiliations
February 2019 - present
Education
October 2012 - February 2019
Publications
Publications (27)
Background
Palliative patients frequently express a desire to die. Health professionals report uncertainty regarding potential risks of addressing it.
Aim
We aim to evaluate effects of desire to die-conversations on palliative patients.
Design
Within a prospective mixed-methods cohort study, we trained health professionals in dealing with desire...
Background:
Desire to die, understood as a broad phenomenon, is common in patients receiving palliative care. Euthanasia ("termination of life on request", §216 German Criminal Code) is currently forbidden in Germany, the legal restrictions with regard to assisted suicide ("assistance of suicide with intent of repeated conduct", §217 German Crimin...
Objectives
Despite the potential benefits of open communication about possible desires to die for patients receiving palliative care, health professionals tend to avoid such conversations and often interpret desires to die as requests for medical aid in dying. After implementing trainings to foster an open, proactive approach toward desire to die,...
Patients receiving palliative care often express a desire to die. Forms and backgrounds of these expressions can be diverse. To contribute to a better understanding of this phenomenon, we analyzed patients' desire to die expressions reported by palliative care providers participating in 11 communication trainings on desire to die. The 102 participa...
Background: Severely ill patients often express a desire to die, which can turn into suicidality. To support health professionals in managing this issue, we initially created a two-day face-to-face training to enhance self-confidence, knowledge, attitudes, and skills. Due to the increasing need for more accessible formats, we aimed to transition th...
Objectives
Up to 40% of severely ill patients report at least an occasional desire to die, opening up not only to professionals but also to hospice volunteers and patients’ informal caregivers. Based on an existing, evaluated 2-day desire to die training for professionals, we intend to adapt the training for hospice volunteers and informal caregive...
Objectives
Wishes to hasten death (WTHDs) are common in patients with serious illness. The Schedule of Attitudes Toward Hastened Death (SAHD) is a validated 20-item instrument for measuring WTHD. Two short versions have also been developed based on statistical item selection. However, all existing versions show some limitations with potential for i...
Background
Patients with serious illness frequently report (temporary) wishes to hasten death. Even until the end-of-life, many patients also harbor a will to live. Although both phenomena are negatively correlated according to some studies, they can also co-exist. Knowledge about the complex relationship between the seemingly opposing wish to hast...
Introduction. Globally, hospitals are an important place in end-of-life care and most frequent place of death in Germany (47%), but at the same time, the least preferred one—both for patients and their informal caregivers. As hospital care in the dying phase on non-palliative care wards has rarely been studied systematically, we assessed the curren...
Patients diagnosed with cancer may develop both temporary and permanent desires to die in the course of their disease. If there is a strong corresponding pressure to act, this desire to die may amount to suicidality or wishes for assisted suicide. Although most desires to die are not accompanied by suicidality, they can be an expression of intense...
Todeswünsche in der Palliativversorung sind ein Phänomen, mit dem Versorgende in allen palliativen Setting regelmäßig konfrontiert werden. Bei Unsicherheiten im Umgang damit hilft die Arbeit mit einem teilstrukturierten Leitfaden. Darüber informiert das vorliegende Kapitel. Selbstverständlich kann ein solcher Leitfaden eine lebendige und adaptive G...
Background
Hospitals are globally an important place of care for dying people and the most frequent place of death in Germany (47%), but at the same time, the least preferred one – for both patients and their relatives. Important indicators and outcome variables indexing quality of care in the dying phase are available, and various proposals to ach...
Zusammenfassung
Ziel der Studie Mitarbeitende der Palliativversorgung werden oft mit Todeswünschen von Patient*innen konfrontiert und berichten Unsicherheiten im Umgang damit. Daher wurden Schulungen zum Thema durchgeführt und evaluiert.
Methodik Teilnehmende der zweitägigen Schulungen beantworteten davor (t0), danach (t1) und 1 Jahr später (t2) Fr...
Dealing with Desire to Die in Palliative Care Abstract. In the course of new legal regulations, the question of how to deal with desire to die is the focus of current professional debates. From the perspective of palliative care, a desire to die should not be thought of only as the wish for assisted suicide, but should be recognised in all its poss...
In order to investigate controversies surrounding the desire to die phenomenon in palliative care by analyzing expert opinions on the topic, we carried out a secondary qualitative data analysis of free text comments collected during a Delphi survey that was designed to develop a conversation aid for dealing with desire to die in everyday clinical p...
Background:
Although desire to die of varying intensity and permanence is frequent in patients receiving palliative care, uncertainty exists concerning appropriate therapeutic responses to it. To support health professionals in dealing with patients´ potential desire to die, a training program and a semi-structured clinical approach was developed....
Background: Although desire to die of varying intensity and permanence is frequent in patients receiving palliative care, uncertainty exists concerning appropriate therapeutic responses to it. To support health professionals in dealing with patients´ potential desire to die, a training program and a semi-structured clinical interview approach was d...
Background: Although desire to die of varying intensity and permanence is frequent in patients receiving palliative care, uncertainty exists concerning appropriate therapeutic responses to it. To support health professionals in dealing with patients´ potential desire to die, a training program and a semi-structured clinical interview approach was d...
Background: Although desire to die of varying intensity and permanence is frequent in patients receiving palliative care, uncertainty exists concerning appropriate therapeutic responses to it. To support health professionals in dealing with patients´ potential desire to die, a training program and a semi-structured clinical interview approach was d...
Objective: Although desire to die (DD) of varying intensity and permanence is frequent in patients with advanced cancer and those receiving palliative care, uncertainty exists concerning appropriate therapeutic responses to it. To support health professionals in dealing with patients´ potential DD, a training program and a semi-structured clinical...
Questions
Question (1)
Hello everybody,
I am currently working on a systematic metaphor analysis as established by Schmitt (2018), adapted from Lakoff and Johnson. My text material is comprised of statements in which palliative patients express their desire to die.
I am looking for metaphors on death and dying, suicidality, assisted suicide, life and meaning. A lot of these statements go along the lines of
- "I just want it all to end."
- "I can't take it anymore."
- "Everything is pointless."
- etc
These indeterminate words are used a lot within the context of death and dying and obviously stand in for something else ("it all" = "life", "it" = "suffering", "everything" = "life" and so on). I just don't see which broader image scheme (e.g. liquid, person, containment, etc) they refer to or how I could call it.
How do you deal with these explicitly vague concepts within metaphor analysis?
Kind regads
Kathleen