How the COVID-19 pandemic shaped Canadians’ preferences for setting of dying: Comparison of two panel surveys.

Publication date: Nov 06, 2024

The purpose of this article is to assess whether COVID-19 shaped Canadians’ preferred settings of dying. We compared data collected using the same survey from two independent but comparable sets of panel respondents, prior to and after the onset of the pandemic. A vignette methodology was used to assess preferences for dying in each of four settings: home, acute/intensive care, palliative care, and long-term residential care. Although preferences for dying at home, in acute/intensive care and palliative care units did not change, preferences for dying in nursing homes significantly declined. In the pandemic’s first and second waves, the spread of knowledge about problems of poor care, visitation restrictions, and fears of contagion in Canadian long-term residential care may have shaped public perceptions of and preferences for dying these settings. If this change persists, it may influence advance care planning decisions. That preferences for dying at home did not shift is, however, noteworthy.

Concepts Keywords
Canadians Acute
Home Assess
Nursing Canadians
Pandemic Care
Preferences Covid
Dying
Intensive
Long
Palliative
Pandemic
Panel
Preferences
Settings
Shaped
Term

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19 pandemic

Original Article

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