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Support for and willingness to be involved in voluntary assisted dying: a multisite, cross-sectional survey study of clinicians in Victoria, Australia

Version 2 2024-05-30, 15:57
Version 1 2021-11-29, 22:36
journal contribution
posted on 2021-01-01, 00:00 authored by M Sellars, M Tacey, R McDougall, B Hayes, B Pratt, Courtney Hempton, K Detering, R Aldrich, M Benson, J Kirwan, M Gold, L O'Driscoll, D Ko
Background: In the Australian state of Victoria, specialist doctors are central to the operation of voluntary assisted dying (VAD). However, a broad range of clinicians may be involved in the care of patients requesting or using VAD. Aims: To describe levels of support for and willingness to be involved in VAD and consider factors associated with clinician support for the VAD legislation and physicians' willingness to provide VAD in practice. Methods: A multisite, cross-sectional survey of clinicians in seven Victorian hospitals. All clinicians were invited to complete an online survey measuring demographic characteristics, awareness of and support for the VAD legislation, willingness to participate in VAD related activities and reasons for willingness or unwillingness to participate in VAD. Results: Of 5690 who opened the survey, 5159 (90.1%) were included in the final sample and 73% (n = 3768) supported the VAD legislation. The strongest predictor of support for the VAD legislation was clinical role. Forty percent (n = 238) of medical specialists indicated they would be willing to participate in either the VAD consulting or coordinating role. Doctors did not differ in willingness between high impact (44%) and low impact specialty (41%); however, doctors specialising in palliative care or geriatric medicine were significantly less willing to participate (27%). Conclusion: Approximately 73% of surveyed staff supported Victoria's VAD legislation. However, only a minority of medical specialists reported willingness to participate in VAD, suggesting potential access issues for patients requesting VAD in accordance with the legal requirements in Victoria.

History

Journal

Internal Medicine Journal

Volume

51

Issue

10

Pagination

1619 - 1628

Publisher

Wiley

Location

London, Eng.

ISSN

1444-0903

eISSN

1445-5994

Language

eng

Publication classification

C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal