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General Content

Death at home: Iranian nurses’, cancer patients’, and family caregivers’ attitudes

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Abstract

It is important to facilitate death at a place that is in accord with dying patients’ preferences. To see if nurses and family members agreed with patients themselves, we asked about attitudes toward death at home of 96 nurses working in oncology departments, 274 cancer patients, and 278 family caregivers in southeastern Iran. Most of the participants saw death at home as a good way of dying and preferred patients to spend their end-of-life days at home. This study supports the argument that providing hospice home care services for terminally ill patients with cancer may facilitate a preference of home death.

Acknowledgment

The authors declare that there is no funding associated with this project.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

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