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Volume 4

Journal of Community & Public Health Nursing

Public Health Nursing 2018

September 19-20, 2018

September 19-20, 2018 Singapore

7

th

International Conference on

Public Health and Nursing

Yvonne Hsiung et al., J Comm Pub Health Nurs 2018, Volume 4

DOI: 10.4172/2471-9846-C1-002

Taiwanese indigenous cancer survivors’ palliative care public understanding, life attitudes, and

behavioral engagement on advance care planning

Yvonne Hsiung, In-Fun Li, Ming-Chung Bai

Mackay Medical College, Taiwan

E

xperiences of Advance Care Planning (ACP) promotion endeavors that increase Taiwanese indigenous people’s awareness

for palliative care education will be shared for rural health care provders. A mixed method study was designed to examine

the influences of obtained knowledge, life attitudes of existential transcendence, optimistic coping, and ACP engagement

among indigenous cancer survivors mostly residing in Eastern Taiwan. This study of a unique sequential exploratory design,

following the preliminary qualitative results, was conducted in two phases and important issues during the recruiment and ACP

promotion process will be discussed, especially limirations in the relatively rurual, under-representative areas. The significance

of this project was valuable in that a large number of indigenous cancer survivors were enrolled, the representative sample

was drawn from various remote Taiwanese areas, the rigorous study design was interdisciplinary, optimal data collection

was managed by their familiar trained professionals, and measures chosen were with little burdens. The results of this study

provided information, for the first time in Taiwan, contributing to set standards for health promotional programs in the current

end-of-life public education. Ultimately, this study leaded to opportunities to decrease personal symptomatic distress, improve

communication among patients, health care providers, and family caregivers, decrease decisional conflicts and care burden,

increase care continuity, and enhance quality of life. Future implications also included clinical and policy-making guidance

particularly for these minority indigenous groups in Taiwan.

Biography

Yvonne Hsiung received her PhD in Palliative Care Nursing in 2011. Being an ethical consultant for terminal patients and family surrogates, her previous research,

teaching, and clinical experiences mostly focused on the health promotion, community education, and cultural advance care planning among minority groups in the

Greater Chicago Area. She returned to Taiwan in 2012 because her father required cancer care. Now she is at Mackay Medical College teaching courses about

Oncology Nursing, Palliative Care, Medical Ethics, Spiritual Nursing Care, and Life and Death Education.

yvonnebear@mmc.edu.tw