Abstract
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 participants were asked to reproduce related patients’ statements from their everyday practice. The 165 reported statements could be assigned to the four topics: “Putting an end to life by …,” “Social death,” “Death images,” as well as “Specific and unspecific references to life, death and dying.” Across these topics, phrasing differs particularly regarding sentence type (interrogative, declarative, propositional, exclamatory), explicitness and (the way of) referencing others (e.g. attribution of power). The compilation of statements reflects a chorus of expressions, which the palliative care providers might hear throughout their professional career as well as during a patient’s process(ing) of disease.
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