Introduction
Globally, an estimated 40 million people need palliative care each year (World Health Organization, 2020). Particularly, the end-of-life stage often brings substantial symptom burden and distress to these patients. Their suffering does not merely include physical pain but is also manifested in psychological, social, and existential dimensions (den Hartogh, Reference den Hartogh2017). For example, palliative care patients may experience depressive moods in facing the deterioration of physical functioning and in turn the loss of independent living (Woo et al., Reference Woo, Maytal and Stern2006; Kennedy, Reference Kennedy2016). The psychological well-being of these patients may further be challenged by family conflicts (François et al., Reference François, Lobb and Barclay2017), financial strain (Hanratty et al., Reference Hanratty, Holland and Jacoby2007), navigating a complex healthcare system, and making treatment decisions that have life and death implications (Woo et al., Reference Woo, Maytal and Stern2006). In the existential dimension, it is also common for patients to feel a lack of meaning in life and to have a strong desire for death or loss of the will to live (Chen et al., Reference Chen, Chen and Xiao2022).
To particularly address the existential distress syndrome that is characterized by hopelessness and loss of meaning or purpose in life, the construct of demoralization has been proposed (Kissane et al., Reference Kissane, Clarke and Street2001; Clarke and Kissane, Reference Clarke and Kissane2002; Vehling and Philipp, Reference Vehling and Philipp2018). According to Kissane et al. (Reference Kissane, Clarke and Street2001), the diagnostic criteria of demoralization includes: (1) the experience of emotional distress (e.g., hopelessness and losing life meaning); (2) attitudes of helplessness, failure, pessimism, and lack of a worthwhile future; (3) reduced coping to respond differently; and (4) social isolation and deficiencies in social support. Demoralization can negatively affect one's psychological well-being and quality of life (Robinson et al., Reference Robinson, Kissane and Brooker2015) and can increase suicidal ideation risk (Xu et al., Reference Xu, Hu and Liu2019). In fact, demoralization has been identified as a syndrome commonly found among palliative care patients (Robinson et al., Reference Robinson, Kissane and Brooker2015). But compared with other psychological syndromes, such as depression, relatively less attention has been paid to this concept in palliative care. A systematic review conducted on palliative care patients reported a prevalence of 13–18% of clinically relevant cases of demoralization (Robinson et al., Reference Robinson, Kissane and Brooker2015). Demoralization is more common with increasing proximity to death (Bovero et al., Reference Bovero, Sedghi and Opezzo2018). The prevalence rate can rise to 52.5% among the most advanced care patients who are at the final stage of disease (Vehling and Mehnert, Reference Vehling and Mehnert2014; Julião et al., Reference Julião, Nunes and Barbosa2016; Rudilla et al., Reference Rudilla, Galiana and Oliver2016).
Previous studies have suggested that demoralization and depression correlated with each other but at the same time are two independent distinct concepts (Nanni et al., Reference Nanni, Caruso and Travado2018; Belvederi Murri et al., Reference Belvederi Murri, Caruso and Ounalli2020). The core symptom of major depressive disorder is characterized by anhedonia (general loss of interest) in the present moment. A person with demoralization might not experience anhedonia but is uncertain about the future, and there is an anticipatory loss of hope and life meaning (Jacobsen et al., Reference Jacobsen, Maytal and Stern2007). Studies indicate that some patients who are demoralized do not experience depression, whereas some patients who suffer from depression do not exhibit symptoms of demoralization (Fang et al., Reference Fang, Chang and Chen2014). Additionally, compared with clinical depression, hopelessness in demoralization has a stronger predictive effect on suicidality (Beck et al., Reference Beck, Kovacs and Weissman1975; Fang et al., Reference Fang, Chang and Chen2014).
Recently, researchers have started to examine the risk and protective factors associated with demoralization. Those who are male, have a partner, and are employed were found to be at lower risk of demoralization among palliative care or cancer patients (Robinson et al., Reference Robinson, Kissane and Brooker2015; Tang et al., Reference Tang, Li and Pang2020). Instead, a high level of physical discomfort, pain, and functional dependency predicted demoralization for these patients (Lichtenthal et al., Reference Lichtenthal, Nilsson and Zhang2009). Studies also show that palliative care patients who received more social support and possessed more social resources are at lower risk of developing demoralization (Robinson et al., Reference Robinson, Kissane and Brooker2015). A study conducted on Chinese breast cancer inpatients also showed similar findings (Tang et al., Reference Tang, Li and Pang2020), suggesting that having a positive social support network can ameliorate patients’ morale and buffer against demoralization.
Of the sources of social support, family support is of great importance for palliative care patients and is a protective factor against psychological symptoms (Hudson et al., Reference Hudson, Remedios and Zordan2012). In the East Asian collectivistic culture, family is one of the most important social ties. When facing the crisis of death and dying, families form a valuable support system which could be helpful in managing distress (Chadda and Deb, Reference Chadda and Deb2013). A previous study of palliative care patients in Hong Kong also found that family support is crucial for their psychosocial well-being, yet they also experienced a “support paradox” in which they desire to receive more family support but also worry that this may be a burden to their family members (Chan et al., Reference Chan, Epstein and Reese2009).
To our knowledge, demoralization has not yet been examined empirically in the Hong Kong Chinese context. In fact, previous studies which examined demoralization in the Chinese context were mainly conducted in mainland China or Taiwan. The targeted participants were cancer patients of various stages, instead of focusing on palliative care patients who are at an advanced stage of illness and are more closely confronted by death and dying. Therefore, this study may help provide empirical findings on the phenomenon of demoralization among Chinese palliative care patients in the Hong Kong context. Based on the literature review conducted, this study aimed to examine the following among Hong Kong Chinese palliative care patients: (1) the prevalence of demoralization among community-dwelling palliative care patients in Hong Kong; (2) the percentage of palliative care patients who are demoralized but not depressed and vice versa; and (3) the association of socio-demographic factors, particularly family support, with demoralization.
Methods
This is a cross-sectional study targeting community-living palliative care patients in Hong Kong.
Participants and recruitment
Inclusion criteria of participants are as follows: (1) Patients were receiving medical follow-up by a palliative care team of a public hospital in Hong Kong; (2) They are Hong Kong Chinese who can understand and communicate in Cantonese; and (3) They were residing in the community. Participants were recruited from community-dwelling palliative care patients who were newly referred to medical social workers in a palliative care unit of a public hospital in Hong Kong during the data collection period (October 2019 to February 2020). The data collection period was shorter than originally planned, due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Patients were first assessed by the referrers (medical social workers) via interviews for confirming the eligibility of participants and determining their appropriateness for joining the study. Medical social workers, based on their professional clinical assessment and patients’ clinical records in the palliative care unit, excluded those who are emotionally and cognitively unfit for participating in the research. Of the 286 eligible palliative care patients identified, 151 (53%) declined to participate in this study. Reasons include (a) not interested (n = 86), (b) did not want to talk about the topic of demoralization (n = 63), and (c) family disagreed (n = 2). The remaining 135 patients were further approached by a research assistant by phone; 81 patients did not answer the phone calls, and finally, 54 patients were successfully interviewed to complete a questionnaire which included various measures.
The study was conducted in accordance with the principles of the Declaration of Helsinki. Written consent was obtained from all participants prior to the data collection. No incentive was provided to the participants. Ethical approval was obtained from the ethics committee board of both the PI's affiliated institution and the Hospital Authority of Hong Kong.
Measures
Demoralization scale
The Chinese version of the demoralization scale (DS) (Hung et al., Reference Hung, Chen and Chang2010) was used to assess the demoralization of palliative care patients. It is a 24-item scale which assesses demoralization status over the past two weeks. Participants were asked to rate their level of agreement on a 5-point Likert scale (0 = strongly disagree to 4 = strongly agree) for each statement. DS demonstrated satisfactory validity and reliability in Chinese cancer patients (Hung et al., Reference Hung, Chen and Chang2010). DS generates a total score (score ranges from 0 to 96) and 5 subscale scores: loss of meaning (5 items; score ranges from 0 to 20), disheartenment (6 items; score ranges from 0 to 24), dysphoria (5 items; score ranges from 0 to 20), helplessness (4 items; score ranges from 0 to 16), and sense of failure (4 items; score ranges from 0 to 16). A higher score indicates a higher level of demoralization. In a previous study (Kissane et al., Reference Kissane, Wein and Love2004), a DS-total score of ≥30 was used as an indicator of clinically relevant moderate demoralization. The same cut-off point in defining a demoralized population (<30: low demoralized; ≥ 30 high demoralized) was used in this study. In our study, we found that Cronbach's alpha of DS-total, DS-loss of meaning, DS-dysphoria, DS-disheartenment, DS-helplessness, and DS-sense of failure are 0.910, 0.773, 0.719, 0.816, 0.710, and 0.452, respectively.
The center for epidemiological studies depression
The 10-item Chinese version of the center for epidemiological studies depression (CESD) was used to assess depression symptom severity in this study (Boey, Reference Boey1999). Participants were asked how often they experienced depressive symptoms over the past week (e.g., restlessness, poor appetite) on a 4-point Likert scale (from 0 = rarely to 3 = most or all the time). The total score ranges from 0 to 60, a higher score indicating more depressive severity. The Chinese version of CESD demonstrated satisfactory validity and reliability among Hong Kong Chinese elderly people (Boey, Reference Boey1999; Cheng and Chan, Reference Cheng and Chan2005). We used a score of 10 as cut-off point in identifying patients with depression and those without (Zhang et al., Reference Zhang, O'Brien and Forrest2012). There is good internal consistency, as evidenced by a Cronbach's alpha of 0.828 we found in this study.
Perceived family support
The Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social support which was developed and validated in Taiwan was used to measure measured family support (Wang and Chung, Reference Wang and Chung2014). This scale was developed with reference to the multidimensional scale of perceived social support developed by Zimet et al. (Reference Zimet, Dahlem and Zimet1988) but modified to better measure the perceived social support from specific sources in the Chinese context in Taiwan (Zimet et al., Reference Zimet, Dahlem and Zimet1988). (This scale was used in this study to specifically measure the perceived family support.) The scale includes 13 items, and participants were asked to rate their level of agreement on a 4-point Likert scale (1 = strongly disagree, 4 = strongly agree) for each statement. The total score ranged from 13 to 52, a higher score indicating a higher level of perceived social support from family. We found that the Cronbach's alpha of this scale is 0.939, indicating excellent internal consistency.
Demographic and clinical data of patients
This includes age, gender, type of illness, marital status, education level, religion, the presence of a primary caregiver, and the relationship with the primary caregiver.
Data analysis
IBM SPSS 23.0 software was used for data analysis. To estimate the prevalence of demoralization, we used a cut-off point of 30, which was used in other previous studies (Kissane et al., Reference Kissane, Wein and Love2004; Julião et al., Reference Julião, Nunes and Barbosa2016; Li et al., Reference Li, Ho and Wang2017). Patients who scored 30 or above were categorized into the “high DS” group, and patients who scored below 30 were categorized into the “low DS group”. We performed cross-tabulation to compare high and low DS scores with both depression categories (<10: not depressed vs. ≥10: depressed). The association between different factors (socio-demographics, depression, and perceived family support) and DS (total score and 5 subscale scores) was analyzed using hierarchical regression. Prior to the main regression analyses, bivariate correlations were performed on all socio-demographic variables and DS. Any demographic variables which showed significant association with DS were treated as potential predictor variables. These variables were entered in step 1 of the regression. Other variables (depression, perceived family support) were entered in step 2 and step 3, respectively. All assumptions were examined prior to the analyses. The P-P plot suggested normal distribution of residual, and we identified no violation of the assumption of linearity tested with scatterplots, multi-collinearity, and homoscedasticity.
Results
Participants
Table 1 shows the demographic and clinical characteristics of the patients. Of the participants, 57% (n = 31) are male. Their age ranges from 41 to 95, with a mean score of 68.36 (SD = 11.97). The majority (78%) were diagnosed with cancer (n = 42). The mean score of the palliative performance scale was 68.14/100 (SD = 10.29; Range: 30–80). Around 70% of participants (n = 56) lived with their main caregivers at the time of study enrolment, 42% (n = 22) have their spouse as the main caregiver, and 34.6% (n = 18) have their daughter(s) or son(s) as their caregivers. In our study, the mean score of perceived family support was 40.81 (SD = 6.38).
Remarks: PPS score is the score of the Palliative Performance Scale. It was used to assess the patient's functional performance and to determine progression toward the end of life. The score ranges from 0 to 100. A lower score indicates a lower level of functional performance and more progression toward the end of life.
Prevalence of demoralization
Table 2 illustrates the descriptive statistics of DS. The mean score of demoralization is 36.02 (SD: 14.03). Using 30 as a cut-off point in determining low and high levels of demoralization, the prevalence of high demoralization was 64.8% (n = 35). The subscale mean score of “loss of meaning,” “dysphoria,” “disheartenment,” “helplessness,” and “sense of failure” is 7.06 (SD: 3.69), 6.93 (SD: 3.67), 8.28 (SD: 3.94), 5.89 (SD: 3.06), and 7.87 (SD: 2.66), respectively.
DS, demoralization score. The DS score ranges from 0 to 96, a higher score indicating a higher demoralization level. The range of the 5 subscale scores of DS is: loss of meaning (ranged from 0 to 20), disheartenment (ranged from 0 to 24), dysphoria (ranged from 0 to 20), helplessness (ranged from 0 to 16), and sense of failure (ranged from 0 to 16).
Demoralization and depression
Table 3 illustrates the cross-tabulation results between the number of participants who have depression and high demoralization (vs. those who does not have depression and low demoralization). Although there was an overlap between demoralization and depression (52.8% meeting the criteria of both), 7.5% of depressed patients were not demoralized, and 13.2% of demoralized patients were not depressed.
Factors associated with demoralization
Our correlation analyses found that of all the socio-demographic and psychosocial variables we tested, only marital status (single vs. non-single), type of caregiver, depression level, and perceived family support showed significant association with DS scores (total and subscale scores). Therefore, only these variables were treated as potential predictor variables in our regression analyses. Table 4 presents the results of regression analyses. Our results indicate that participants who were not single (β = −0.28, p < 0.05), had more depressive symptoms (β = 0.67, p < 0.001), and had less family support (β = −0.22, p < 0.05) had a significantly higher total DS score. This model explains 59.2% of the variance in the total DS score.
CESD, The centre for epidemiological studies depression; DS, demoralization scale.
B, unstandardized regression coefficients; β, standardized regression coefficients; ns, not significant.
a The variable single is coded as non-single (coded as 0) and single (coded as 1). Single included those who have a single status/divorced/widowed.
b The variables “Caregivers as siblings/caregivers as daughter(s)/son(s)” are coded as “Caregivers are not siblings/daughter(s)/son(s) of the patients” (coded as 0) and “Caregivers are the sibling(s)/daughter(s)/son(s) of the patients”.
c The final model refers to the model shown at the final step of the regression model.
*p < 0.05; **p < 0.01, ***p < 0.001.
A similar result was found on the subscales DS-helplessness and DS-disheartenment. Participants who were not single (Helplessness: β = −0.25, p < 0.05; Disheartenment: β = −0.43, p < 0.001), had more depressive symptoms (Helplessness: β = 0.60, p < 0.001; Disheartenment: β = 0.48, p < 0.001), and had less family support (Helplessness: β = −0.31, p < 0.01, Disheartenment: β = −0.26, p < 0.05) had a significantly higher DS-helplessness score and DS-Disheartenment score. The two models explain 51% and 49% of the variance in the DS-helplessness score and DS-disheartenment score, respectively. For the remaining DS-subscales, depression was found as the only factor in predicting DS-sense of failure (β = 0.50, p < 0.001), DS-dysphoria (β = 0.59, p < 0.001), and DS-loss of meaning (β = 0.52, p < 0.001).
Discussion
To our knowledge, this is the first study that solely examined the demoralization of cancer and non-cancer Chinese palliative care patients. In Hong Kong, cancer is still the major type of illness in palliative care patients, but similar to the profile of patients in this study, palliative care services have extended to other patients with other life-threatening illnesses, like end-stage renal failure.
Our findings indicate a very high percentage of demoralization among these community-living palliative care patients in Hong Kong (64.8%), which is higher than what was found among terminally ill patients in Portugal (52.5%) (Julião et al., Reference Julião, Nunes and Barbosa2016) and advanced cancer patients in Taiwan (27.5%) (Li et al., Reference Li, Ho and Wang2017) (with the same cut-off score of DS). Consistently, we found that the mean DS score (36.2) of our samples is staggeringly high, which is by far the highest mean score reported in the existing literature on demoralization. The mean DS score of cancer patients reported by Western countries (e.g., Australia, Germany, and Ireland) ranged from 20 to 30 (Kissane et al., Reference Kissane, Wein and Love2004; Boscaglia and Clarke, Reference Boscaglia and Clarke2007; Mehnert et al., Reference Mehnert, Vehling and Höcker2011; Mehnert-Theuerkauf and Vehling, Reference Mehnert-Theuerkauf, Vehling, Linden and Maercker2011; Vehling et al., Reference Vehling, Oechsle and Koch2013; Costantini et al., Reference Costantini, Pompili and Innamorati2014).
One reason for our findings may be related to the samples of this study: community-dwelling palliative care patients who were newly referred for receiving medical social work services. In Hong Kong, palliative care services are provided by the hospital-based specialist palliative care teams of public hospitals under the Hospital Authority. In general, these palliative care patients will only be hospitalized in the palliative care wards when they need more intensive symptom control. If not, they usually attend regular follow-up at out-patient palliative care clinics and receive palliative care nurses’ visits at homes. When they are referred by nurses or doctors to medical social workers to receive the services, it is likely that they are the most disadvantaged group or have shown psychosocial distress and are in need of professional support. Therefore, this may explain why the current samples showed a particularly high level of demoralization. Despite this, our findings call for attention to the severity of demoralization among palliative care patients in Hong Kong and reflection on whether palliative care services may provide adequate end-of-life support, particularly to those who are demoralized (Quinn et al., Reference Quinn, Wegier and Stukel2021).
Supporting palliative care patients who are demoralized is challenging for both family caregivers and helping professionals. Facing death and dying, which involves experiencing symptom burden and death anxiety, is a problem which may lead to the demoralization of palliative care patients (An et al., Reference An, Lo and Hales2018). But family caregivers often have great concern about how they may address these existential issues with patients who are confronted by death and dying (Melin-Johansson et al., Reference Melin-Johansson, Henoch and Strang2012). The worry of addressing existential issues may be one reason family caregivers often have difficulty and lack confidence in providing care to patients who are approaching the end of life. For example, only 63.8% of Hong Kong family caregivers who are currently providing care to their older family members were found to be willing to continue providing care in the end-of-life care context (Chan, Reference Chan2021).
Our findings may also highlight the tremendous challenges of palliative care professionals, like medical social workers, in working with patients with a high level of demoralization. Demoralized patients may be preoccupied with feelings of hopelessness and helplessness, which may bring various emotional and existential challenges to palliative care professionals, such as feeling helplessness and questioning life's meaningfulness (Chan and Tin, Reference Chan and Tin2012; Chan et al., Reference Chan, Tin and Wong2016). Failure to cope with these challenges may have adverse effects on their professional quality of life, such as experiencing burnout and secondary traumatic stress (Stamm, Reference Stamm2010; Chan and Tin, Reference Chan and Tin2012; Chan et al., Reference Chan, Tin and Yu2020). Previous studies suggest that enhancing “self-competence in death work” may help them to cope with these challenges (Chan et al., Reference Chan, Tin and Wong2015, Reference Chan, Tin and Yu2020). A randomized controlled trial proved that a three-day experiential workshop could effectively enhance helping professionals’ self-competence in death work, and the positive effect was sustained 3 months after the workshop (Chan et al., Reference Chan, Tin and Yu2017). A previous study also found that a higher level of self-competence in death work was associated with a higher level of hospice self-efficacy (Zheng et al., Reference Zheng, Luo and Zhang2020).
Our findings are consistent with what has been suggested in the literature, highlighting the importance of differentiating the constructs between demoralization and depression (de Figueiredo, Reference de Figueiredo1993; Julião et al., Reference Julião, Nunes and Barbosa2016; Nanni et al., Reference Nanni, Caruso and Travado2018; Belvederi Murri et al., Reference Belvederi Murri, Caruso and Ounalli2020). Around 13.2% of participants of this study experienced a high level of demoralization but a low level of depression. In a study conducted in Portugal, patients with a high level of demoralization but not depression were even found to be as high as 42.9% (Julião et al., Reference Julião, Nunes and Barbosa2016). Therefore, it is important for palliative care professionals to differentiate between depression and demoralization among palliative care patients, as the latter was found to have a strong predictive effect on suicidality (Beck et al., Reference Beck, Kovacs and Weissman1975; Fang et al., Reference Fang, Chang and Chen2014). Currently, assessment in the health care setting, including in palliative care, has been focused on depression screening (Payne et al., Reference Payne, Barry and Creedon2007). Our findings provide further evidence of the importance of assessing demoralization, and not depression only, among palliative care patients. This may help identify patients who are at risk of suicide and require further support.
Our study also suggests that patients who are less depressed, have a higher level of perceived family support, and are single (single, divorced, widowed) may be at lower risk of demoralization. Our findings are consistent with those of most studies, which found family support (Li et al., Reference Li, Ho and Wang2017) and being less depressed (Julião et al., Reference Julião, Nunes and Barbosa2016; Tang et al., Reference Tang, Li and Pang2020) are the protective factor against demoralization. Interestingly, we found that patients who are not single are at increased risk of demoralization. Existing literature in this area has shown mixed results. Some studies found that having a partner is a protective factor against demoralization (Grandi et al., Reference Grandi, Sirri and Tossani2011), whereas some did not find any association with that factor (Lee et al., Reference Lee, Fang and Yang2012; Fang et al., Reference Fang, Chang and Chen2014; Vehling and Mehnert, Reference Vehling and Mehnert2014). A possible explanation is that palliative care patients who are not single could often experience a feeling of being a burden to their spouse, including being a physical burden (physical exhaustion to caregivers), and financial and emotional burden. Studies indicate that self-perceived burden is a common feeling experienced by palliative care patients (De Faye et al., Reference De Faye, Wilson and Chater2006; Gudat et al., Reference Gudat, Ohnsorge and Streeck2019). The feeling of being a burden often provokes a feeling of guilt, suicidal ideation, and death-hastening acts (McPherson et al., Reference McPherson, Wilson and Murray2007; Gudat et al., Reference Gudat, Ohnsorge and Streeck2019). The presence of a partner may also place a patient at greater risk of experiencing possible family conflicts, such as family disagreements about medical decisions, which may increase their sense of helplessness and hopelessness in the experience of demoralization (Lichtenthal and Kissane, Reference Lichtenthal and Kissane2008). A growing body of literature has found evidence that perceived support mitigated the negative effect of being single on well-being (Adamczyk, Reference Adamczyk2016). This may suggest that whether an individual is single may not be a key factor which affects the demoralization level. Instead, it is the family support the patients perceive that determines their demoralization. We suggest future studies further investigate this by understanding the relationship of marital status and demoralization in the context of family harmony and family support, such as studying whether there is a mediating effect of perceived social support between marital status and demoralization. Our findings highlight the possible positive effects of family support for reducing the demoralization of palliative care patients. Palliative care professionals may focus on how they may help family members to better convey their support to patients with demoralization, like facilitating family members’ developing meaningful interactions with patients via legacy activities (Allen et al., Reference Allen, Hilgeman and Ege2008; Allen, Reference Allen2009) and involving family members’ participation in activities which aim to enhance patients’ dignity in end-of-life care (Wang et al., Reference Wang, Chen and Wang2020).
At the same time, palliative care professionals may also need to pay attention to supporting family caregivers of palliative care patients who may be influenced by patients’ demoralization and are at risk of demoralization (Hudson et al., Reference Hudson, Remedios and Zordan2012). For example, it is important to address the spiritual needs and enhance the spirituality of family caregivers of palliative care patients (Lalani et al., Reference Lalani, Duggleby and Olson2018).
Limitations
This study has several limitations. Our sample size is small, and participants were all recruited from one palliative care unit. Our findings may not be representative of the community-living palliative care patients in Hong Kong. Future studies may consider recruiting participants from a larger and more heterogeneous study population. The refusal rate of potential participants was high (53%), and unfortunately data were not available for examining whether there are significant differences in demographics and severity of illnesses between those who refused to participate and those who participated.
Also, this is a cross-sectional study. We are unable to make a causal inference, as both the exposure (factors we examined) and outcome (demoralization) were collected at the same time. No temporality between these variables can be inferred. The reliability of the subscale, sense of failure, was particularly low, and in fact, similar findings were reported in previous studies which may be related to the reverse scoring of items (Hung et al., Reference Hung, Chen and Chang2010; Rudilla et al., Reference Rudilla, Galiana and Oliver2016; Li et al., Reference Li, Ho and Wang2017). Findings using this subscale should be understood with caution. Although our study identified family support as a protective factor against demoralization, it is unclear whether what the family does or conveys could contribute to the protective effect. Future studies may consider examining the effect of other family factors, such as the level of family cohesiveness and family emotional expressiveness on demoralization. Despite the limitations, our study allows us to include the patient group that is difficult to research and examined for the first time the topic of demoralization among palliative care patients in Hong Kong.
Conclusion
This study is the first that reports the prevalence of demoralization among Hong Kong palliative care patients. Our findings indicate that demoralization is common in these community-dwelling palliative care patients. The high prevalence reported in this study calls for attention to how we may better support palliative care patients to cope with demoralization. Early assessment of demoralization among palliative care patients should be considered in the provision of palliative care.
Acknowledgments
We would like to express our gratitude to the medical social workers who assisted with the recruitment of participants in this study. Also, special thanks are given to all participants who were willing to share their situations with us.
Funding
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial, or not-for-profit sector.
Conflict of interest
There authors delcared none.