• Title/Summary/Keyword: 죽음의 태도

Search Result 203, Processing Time 0.024 seconds

Comparison of Attitudes toward Death among Nursing Students from South Korea, Japan and Indonesia (한국.일본.인도네시아 간호대학생의 죽음에 대한 태도 비교)

  • Lee, So Woo;Lee, So Young;Lee, Young Whee;Kuwano, Noriko;Ando, Michiyo;Hayashi, Mariko;Wardaningsih, Shanti
    • Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care
    • /
    • v.15 no.4
    • /
    • pp.212-221
    • /
    • 2012
  • Purpose: This study was performed to compare nursing students' attitudes toward death among South Korea, Japan and Indonesia, and to confirm the need for death education in nursing. Methods: A total of 294 nursing students completed a questionnaire titled as the Death Attitude Profile-Revised (Wong, Recker, Gesser. 1994). Participating students were from two nursing schools in South Korea, two in Japan and one in Indonesia. Data were analyzed by using descriptive statistics and inferential statistics including, ${\chi}^2$-test, ANOVA and multiple comparison analysis. Results: The total mean score of the DAP-R for the three countries combined was $3.84{\pm}0.73$. By country, the mean was the highest for Indonesian students ($4.32{\pm}0.71$), followed by Korean ($3.75{\pm}0.57$) and Japanese ($3.56{\pm}0.70$) respectively. In relation to subcategories, Indonesian students showed the highest mean score for death avoidance ($3.67{\pm}1.38$) and approach acceptance ($5.37{\pm}1.00$). Korean students marked the highest ($5.51{\pm}0.91$) in neutral acceptance and Japanese students scored the best ($3.63{\pm}1.46$) in escape acceptance. Nursing students who had an experience of caring terminally ill patients tended to be affirmative in approach acceptance (P=0.047). There were significant differences in each of the four subcategories except fear of death among the three countries (P<0.001). Conclusion: The above results indicate it is necessary to develop education programs based on each country's social and cultural background to help nursing students form desirable attitudes toward death.

A Study on Development of a View of Life and Death Scale (사생관 척도의 개발)

  • Yoshiyuki Inumiya ;Seong-Yeul Han
    • Korean Journal of Culture and Social Issue
    • /
    • v.10 no.1
    • /
    • pp.31-82
    • /
    • 2004
  • The purpose of this study was development of a synthetic scale to measure young adults' views of life and death. Participants were 610 university students. The authors developed a View of Life and Death Scale including several subscales of afterlife views(belief in afterlife and retribution, belief in souls' effects and transmigration), meanings of death(liberation, nature, integration, collapse, impact, futility), death anxiety, death concern(death acceptance, death awareness) and life respect will(suicide inhibition, abortion inhibition, organ donation intention). The present study contributed to enhance our understanding of view of life and death in young adulthood. This study, therefore, could work as a stepping stone to investigate the structural relationship among elements included in views of life and death in young adulthood and to explore the consequences and determinants of personal view of life and death.

  • PDF

Death Acceptance and Religion in the Case of Koreans (한국인의 죽음 수용과 종교)

  • Yi, Gi-Hong
    • Survey Research
    • /
    • v.10 no.3
    • /
    • pp.131-156
    • /
    • 2009
  • This paper analyzes the relationship between death acceptance and religion using a national data set of 1,000 respondents. Death acceptance conceptually contrasts with death anxiety, but is recently preferred by death researchers due to its relatively neutral connotations. This research looks into the relationship between death acceptance and religion as most previous research thereon has been unable to suggest some definitive conclusion, using the LOWESS technique, path analysis, etc.. According to the result, the religious, women and the older are more death-accepting than the irreligious, men, and the younger respectively. Education forms a complex and curvy-linear relationship with death acceptance; at the level of graduate education and higher, the respondents get more death-accepting. By religion, Protestants turn out more death-accepting than Buddhists. Should this kind of research continue, the results may be applicable to determine optimal ways to approach the population with extreme attitudes towards death.

  • PDF

Attitudes toward death awareness among department of health university students (보건계열 대학생들의 죽음인식에 대한 태도)

  • Yu, Eun-Yeong;Yang, Yu-Jeong;Jung, Eun-Yeong
    • Journal of Digital Convergence
    • /
    • v.15 no.5
    • /
    • pp.241-251
    • /
    • 2017
  • This study was conducted to investigate 314 college students in G area from December 1 to December 30, 2015 to investigate death attitude and related factors of health college students. As a result of the analysis, the level of death awareness was 2.04, and the average score was 2.49 points of pain anxiety, 1.95 points of death anxiety, and 1.86 points of anxiety. Death awareness sub - domains showed significant differences in age, grade, health status, and living standards. Pain anxiety, death anxiety, and later life anxiety. The results of this study are as follows: First, the effects of anxiety and anxiety on death, anxiety of death, anxiety of life, anxiety of suffering, anxiety of life, anxiety of death, The fear of death was not so great as death felt far from reality at once. However, a correct perception of death can lead to more peaceful deaths and more rewarding life for the present. Death preparation education is needed to live a meaningful life for college students who are far from death.

A Convergence Study on the relationships among Attitude toward Death, Spiritual Well-being and Awareness about Organ Donation of Nursing Students (간호대학생의 죽음태도, 영적건강 및 장기기증 인식 간의 관련성에 대한 융합적 연구)

  • Choi, Dongwon;Lim, Junghye
    • Journal of the Korea Convergence Society
    • /
    • v.8 no.5
    • /
    • pp.265-273
    • /
    • 2017
  • This study is convergence study to identify the relationships among attitude toward death(ATD), spiritual well-being(SW) and awareness about organ donation(AAOD). The survey was performed on 214 nursing students in one university. Data was collected using a structured questionnaires and analysed with PASW 20.0. Study findings revealed that AAOD has a significant correlation with ATD and SW. ATD(${\beta}=-.159$), SW(${\beta}=.132$), idea about brain death's organ donation(${\beta}=.314$), and major satisfaction(${\beta}=.134$) about AAOD were most significant predictive variables. These variables accounted for 20.5% of the variance in AAOD. The findings indicate the necessity of developing educational programs to enhance nursing students's ATD and SW for increasing positive AAOD and further rate of organ donation, and follow-up study.

Effects of Experience of Suffering, Self-forgiveness and Emotional Expression of Loss on Nurses' Attitude toward Dignified Death (간호사의 고통경험, 자기용서 및 상실에 대한 정서표현이 품위 있는 죽음태도에 미치는 요인)

  • Yoo, Eun-Young;Lee, Ju-Ry
    • Journal of Digital Convergence
    • /
    • v.18 no.10
    • /
    • pp.353-359
    • /
    • 2020
  • Purpose: The purpose of this study was to identify the effects of suffering experience, self-forgiveness and emotional expression of loss on nurses' attitude toward dignified death. Methods: The subjects in this study were 140 nurses, had been working over 6 months in a general hospital. Data were collected from July 1 to August 31 2016, by using self-reported questionnaires. Data were analyzed using the IBM SPSS 19.0 programs. Results: The significant predictors that affected nurses' attitude toward dignified death were experience of suffering, emotional expression of loss, religion and educational level. The explained variance for nurses' attitude toward dignified death was 63.9% and the most significant factor was emotional expression of loss. Conclusion: These results suggest that attitude toward dignified death of nurses can be changed positively by communicating emotional expression of loss and their suffering experience.

Effects of Perception of Good Death and Knowledge toward Advance Directive on Attitude Toward withdrawal of Life-sustaining Treatment among University Hospital Nurses (대학병원 간호사의 좋은 죽음에 대한 인식과 사전연명의료의향서 지식이 연명의료 중단에 대한 태도에 미치는 영향)

  • Cho, Eun-A;Ki, Jeong-Sook
    • The Journal of the Korea Contents Association
    • /
    • v.21 no.4
    • /
    • pp.688-698
    • /
    • 2021
  • The purpose of this study was to determine the effects of perception of good death and knowledge toward advance directive on attitude toward withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment among university hospital nurses. The subjects of this study were 207 university hospital nurses. Data were analyzed using the SPSS Statistics 24.0 version. The results showed that factors influencing attitude toward withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment were perception of good death (𝛽=-.32, p<.001), education experience for good death (𝛽=.15, p=.024), and knowledge toward advance directive (𝛽=.14, p=.036). They explained 14.2% of attitude toward withdrawal of life-sustaining treatment. Based on the results of this study, it suggests the development of education programs for good death and life-sustaining treatment to improve the perception of good death, knowledge toward advance directive of university hospital nurses.

The study on the view of death in the Buddhism for well dying's culture formation (웰다잉(well dying) 문화 형성을 위한 불교의 죽음관 연구)

  • Yun, Young-ho
    • Journal of Korean Philosophical Society
    • /
    • v.130
    • /
    • pp.161-186
    • /
    • 2014
  • Recently, the social concerns on well dying come to the fore as important discourse on dignity of human death, which detonation by the problem of euthanasia. Well dying means 'good death' the meaning of a word, and it means 'prepared death', 'decented death' 'beautiful death' by extention of sematic context like this as a general rule. In this paper the writter have considered that how the view of Buddhism's death contribute to the discourse on well dying, which regarding death as the starting point, death conquest as the finishing point of the theory. The Buddhism's discourse on the attitude interpretation conquest process of death contributed to formation of abundant discourse on well dying, especially the view of Buddhism is able to contribute to conquest of death anxiety and death education, that death conquest interpret to spiritual psychological phenomenon not physical physiological eternal life (or immortality) and conquer death through enlightenment on reality of things by spiritual psychological change.

Factors Affecting the attitude to death of Social Welfare Students (사회복지전공 대학생의 죽음에 대한 태도의 영향요인)

  • Kim, Bo-Mi
    • Journal of Digital Convergence
    • /
    • v.19 no.11
    • /
    • pp.545-553
    • /
    • 2021
  • This research was conducted to examine the attitude to death, and identify factors influencing attitude to death, in social welfare students. Data were collected from 179 social welfare students. in two universities. Data were collected from April to June 2021 using structured questionnaires. Data collected were analyzed by descriptive statistics, t-test, ANOVA, Pearson correlations, and multiple regression analysis. The results indicated that meaning in life(r=.34, p=.001) had a significant positive association with attitude to death. And life satisfaction(r=.61, p<.001) and resilience(r=.65, p<.001) were positively correlated with attitude to death, The significant predictors of attitude to death, were grade(β=.21, p=.002) and life satisfaction(β=.22, p=.013), explaining 20.2% of the variance. Based on the study results, we suggest that it is necessary to develop counseling and attitude to death programs that can positively change the attitude of social welfare students

Predictive Factors for City Dwellers' Attitudes toward Death with Dignity (일개 도시주민의 품위 있는 죽음 태도에 대한 예측 요인)

  • Jo, Kae Hwa;An, Gyeong Ju;Kim, Gyun Moo;Kim, Yeon Ja
    • Journal of Hospice and Palliative Care
    • /
    • v.15 no.4
    • /
    • pp.193-204
    • /
    • 2012
  • Purpose: This correlation study was performed to examine Korean adults' perceptions and attitudes towards death with dignity and the withdrawal of life sustaining treatment and to identify factors that predict their attitude towards death with dignity. Methods: The study was conducted using convenience sampling of 291 adults from three towns of a metropolitan city in Korea. Data were collected using structured questionnaires which surveyed people's perception about and attitudes towards withdrawal of life sustaining treatment and scaled their attitude towards death with dignity. Data were analyzed by using descriptive statistics, Pearson correlation coefficients and multiple regression. Results: The attitude towards the withdrawal of life sustaining treatment and death with dignity showed a significant positive correlation (r=0.49, P<0.001). For attitudes towards death with dignity, significant predictors were attitudes towards the withdrawal of life sustaining treatment, age, religion, a proper withdrawal process and advanced medical directives, which explained 49.3% of total variance. Conclusion: The results of this study may contribute to development of a new medical decision-making system including nurses' appropriate roles in the process of withdrawing life sustaining treatment and advanced medical directives.