US, Russian and Indian physician perspectives regarding end of life care

James G. Jackson , Sheetal Moolambally Raj , Yulia Matveeva , Yinghui Xu , Gerald J. Jogerst

Russian Family Doctor ›› 2020, Vol. 24 ›› Issue (3) : 11 -20.

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Russian Family Doctor ›› 2020, Vol. 24 ›› Issue (3) : 11 -20. DOI: 10.17816/RFD41869
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US, Russian and Indian physician perspectives regarding end of life care

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Abstract

Aim. To compare US, Russian and Indian primary care physicians’ attitudes, comfort and experiences providing palliative care.

Design. Cross sectional survey.

Settings. Iowa, USA; Leningrad Oblast, Russia; Mangalore, India.

Participants. Primary care physicians.

Methods. Chi-squared testing for dichotomous variables and t-tests for mean scores.

Results. 66 US, 81 Russian and 95 Indian physicians completed the survey. More US physicians preferred end of life care at home (83% v 56% Russian and 29% Indian) p < 0.001 and Indian physicians preferring hospitals (36% v 0% US and 1% Russian) p < 0.001. 94% percent of US physicians preferred patient make their own decisions, 57% of Russian sample preferred physicians as decision makers, and Indian physicians preferred family members to patients themselves (44%) p < 0.001. Patient should be informed (US vs Russia vs India) of terminal illness “Always” (74% vs 31% vs 33%) p < 0.001, “If Asked” (9% vs 64% vs 12%) p < 0.001 or “Physician’s Judgement” (15%, 5%, 54%) p < 0.001. US physicians reported higher comfort rates with managing symptoms at the end of life. In the last 6 months US physicians were more satisfied with provided care “Often or Always” (63% vs 36% Russian v 21% Indian) p < 0.001.

Conclusions. US sample was more concerned with patient autonomy and had more comfort and satisfaction in providing end of life care compared to Russian and Indian samples.

Keywords

hospice / palliative care / cross-cultural / decision-making / USA / India / Russia

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James G. Jackson, Sheetal Moolambally Raj, Yulia Matveeva, Yinghui Xu, Gerald J. Jogerst. US, Russian and Indian physician perspectives regarding end of life care. Russian Family Doctor, 2020, 24(3): 11-20 DOI:10.17816/RFD41869

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Jackson J.G., Raj S.M., Matveeva Y., Xu Y., Jogerst G.J.

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