2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.apnr.2019.151187
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Nurses' perspectives on advance directives before the establishment of the new well-dying law in Korea: A mixed methods study

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Cited by 9 publications
(18 citation statements)
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References 31 publications
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“…15 Four articles constituted a quantitative analytic approach and cross-sectional study design. 4,5,10,11 Two articles used an exploratory sequential mixed method 12,16 that is characterized by an initial qualitative phase of data collection and analysis, followed by a quantitative phase with final integration of the 2 phases. 14 Only 1 article presented a qualitative approach, which utilized convenience and snowball sampling methods for an online self-administered survey, including open-ended questions about health information-seeking experience of KIs.…”
Section: Evidence Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…15 Four articles constituted a quantitative analytic approach and cross-sectional study design. 4,5,10,11 Two articles used an exploratory sequential mixed method 12,16 that is characterized by an initial qualitative phase of data collection and analysis, followed by a quantitative phase with final integration of the 2 phases. 14 Only 1 article presented a qualitative approach, which utilized convenience and snowball sampling methods for an online self-administered survey, including open-ended questions about health information-seeking experience of KIs.…”
Section: Evidence Evaluationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…'s (2018) study underscores the efficacy of giving patients time to contemplate end‐of‐life issues and make decisions without pressure, further highlighting the importance of introducing the planning process earlier, a view echoed by Sampson et al. (2010) and Son, Choi, and Ahn (2020). Poppe, Burleigh, and Banerjee (2013) agree, in their qualitative study conducted in the United Kingdom (U.K.) on persons with early dementia, that timing is crucial, positing that an early discussion garners the best patient outcomes.…”
Section: Time To Decidementioning
confidence: 98%
“…However, in considering the low take‐up rates for advance directives, Sampson et al. 's (2010) study does add the caveat that many people simply do not want to plan for death, preferring to live in denial, or to take ‘one day at a time’, a view echoed in the wider literature (Bond & Lowton, 2011; Fried & Drickamer, 2010; Kelly, 2017; Son et al., 2020; Zimmerman, 2007). Conversely, Poppe et al.…”
Section: Time To Decidementioning
confidence: 99%
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