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ORIGINAL ARTICLE

Int J Public Health, 30 August 2024
This article is part of the Special Issue MEDICAL AID IN DYING: A SOCIETAL CHALLENGE View all 6 articles

“The Razor’s Edge of Timing:” A Phenomenological Analysis of Decision-Making Processes Surrounding Medical Aid in Dying

  • 1School of Social Work, Colorado State University, Fort Collins, CO, United States
  • 2Practically Dying, Inc., Longmont, CO, United States

Objectives: The study aimed to explore how terminally ill individuals in the United States approach medical aid in dying (MAID), including personal, interpersonal and structural factors that influence their decision-making processes.

Methods: This embodied phenomenological study incorporated semi-structured (N = 9) interviews with seven terminally ill adults who received a prescription for MAID. Interviews occurred over Zoom between October 2021-January 2023 and was guided by Ashworth’s framework for exploring phenomenological lifeworlds. Participants were invited to share perceptions of their lifeworlds in pursuit of MAID including values; embodied health, ability, and emotions; space and place in society; reflections on time/timing; and political and cultural discourse. Data analysis integrated Wertz’s phenomenological psychological analysis methods.

Results: The phenomenon of choosing MAID is an intricate juggling of lifeworlds between participants’ embodied relationships, values, time and agency which lead to co-existing experiences of uncertainty and hard-won relief.

Conclusion: Our findings contribute cutting-edge knowledge of the decisional tensions and triumphs terminally ill individuals encounter as they approach MAID and highlight practical implications for health and mental health providers in preparing psychoeducational support for those seeking MAID.

Introduction

Two centuries of progress in modern medicine and public health education have led chronic and degenerative disease to outpace infectious disease, paradoxically leading to an increase in slow, protracted deaths of old age, organ failure, or frailty [13]. End-of-life (EOL) healthcare options may foster extended life, yet increase the likelihood of physical distress [4, 5] and psychosocial strain [610], such as decisional anxiety [11]. How one chooses to spend their final days and approach EOL decisions depends on access to resources (e.g., educational, financial, social, physical and cognitive ability) [1214] and personal values surrounding health and quality of life [15, 16]. Research documents the complex decisional calculus that terminally ill individuals balance between layers of personal, interpersonal and structural factors [1719]; however, evidence describing the phenomenon of choosing medical aid in dying (MAID) in the United States remains insufficient.

The 21st century’s primary social challenge of dying — the timing of death — focuses on prevention of traumatic deaths, dependency, and uncertainty [20] in favor of more humanitarian dying processes [21]. In the late 1980s, residents of western U.S. states advocated to legalize MAID as an EOL option that promoted choice and agency [22]. Oregon residents successfully led a voter ballot initiative to legalize MAID in 1997 [23] and 9 other U.S. states and the District of Columbia have followed suit [2426]. Requirements to access aid in dying vary; however, each U.S. state and the District of Columbia require that terminally ill individuals have cognitive capacity and receive a prescription from a medical provider for medications they will self-ingest to end their lives [24, 27, 28]. Kozlov and colleagues [29] compiled data from districts’ disparate registries to determine that over the past 23 years, 8451 terminally ill individuals received MAID prescriptions, while 5,329 died using these medications. Among these individuals, the median age was 74 years, and the majority were male, non-Hispanic White, college educated and had a diagnosis of cancer. While budding data demonstrates trends in usage, limited research provides context around forces that drive terminally ill individuals’ decision-making to pursue medical aid in dying in the United States [30, 31].

Decisions at the EOL often involve painful trade-offs, regardless of an individual’s degree of preparation [32, 33]. Values—and the strength of their clarity—act as psychological guideposts for terminally ill individuals to choose a path forward amidst uncertainty [34, 35]. Culture frequently serves as a constraining factor, narrowing the possible values that influence a decision [3638]. Overwhelmingly, individuals who have chosen MAID report basing their decisions on the values of autonomy, control, and choice [39, 40]. However, we lack broad understanding of how and why people in the United States integrate these values into their aid in dying decision-making processes [41, 42].

Knowledge from other countries about decisions to choose MAID echo terminally ill individuals’ desire to limit anxiety surrounding potential suffering and the loss of personal dignity [43, 44]. Notably, uncertainties surrounding MAID access and numerous medical tasks [43, 45] make it impossible to avoid decisional anxiety. Given the estimated 74 million people living in United States’ jurisdictions with aid in dying legislation [24, 29], an urgent public health imperative remains to understand decision-making processes, benefits, and barriers residents encounter.

Study Purpose

This study aimed to explore how terminally ill individuals in the United States approach a medically assisted death, including (1) personal, interpersonal and structural factors that influence their decision-making processes; (2) values about their body and identity; and (3) pivotal physical, psychosocial and existential moments throughout the preparation for an aid in dying death.

Methods

Research Design

Maurice Merleau-Ponty’s phenomenology of perception served as the philosophical framework to inform the study design, data collection, analysis, and presentation of findings. His embodied phenomenology incorporates a lens from which to classify one’s perceived experiences of their body within a larger social context [46] and provides a framework from which to conceptualize the interdependent, layered contexts of the body, interpersonal relationships, and social structures inherent in an aid in dying death [47].

Sample

The study’s sample (see Table 1) included seven adults, ages 58–94 (mean age 73.1) who met MAID criteria and had received a prescription for aid in dying medications. Purposive sampling entailed partnering with medical and mental health providers and organizations that provide resources for those gathering information about MAID (e.g., the American Clinicians Academy on Medical Aid in Dying, Compassion and Choices, Death with Dignity, doula organizations, the Association for Death Education and Counseling, and state-based aid in dying support and advocacy organizations). We took a broad approach to recruitment by partnering with providers and support organizations from different states, and personal interests in MAID so that we could reduce bias in our recruitment process. Snowball sampling happened when two participants shared about their research participation with friends. Recruitment sources shared a flier (in English or Spanish) with interested individuals that included a link and QR code to the online consent form.

Table 1
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Table 1. Participant sociodemographics (N = 7) (United States, 2024).

To protect the confidentiality of participants, of whom several chose not to tell loved ones about their pursuit of MAID, we present participant sociodemographic data in broad terms and identify quotes with a pseudonym. The sample was predominantly female (6/7, 85.7%), White (100%), and worked in health, mental health or education fields. Their terminal diagnoses included cancer (3/7, 42.8%), neurological illness (2/7, 28.6%), or cardiac disease (2/7, 28.6%). Participants represented five of the 11 authorized jurisdictions, all of which have disparate access to MAID.

Data Collection

Prior to data collection, members of the research team participated in individual and group-based reflection to begin the process of bridling [48] to decipher how their prior knowledge, practice and potential biases as a healthcare social worker, researcher or thanatologist may inform data collection, analysis and the presentation of the findings. After completing the Qualtrics online consent form, survey questions addressed participant’s health status and when they began the MAID process. Each participant consented to have their interview both audio and video recorded over Zoom between the months of October 2021 - January 2023. Two participants chose to complete one follow-up interview within 3 weeks of their initial interview. Caregivers who joined the interview also completed consent documents. Participants received a $30 Amazon egift card for each interview.

Initial interviews followed the same semi-structured interview guide (see Table 2), with the follow-up interview guide gathering updates on their experiences in approaching an aid in dying death. The initial interview questions focused on personal, interpersonal and structural influences on their decision-making, and barriers and triumphs encountered throughout their pursuit of MAID. During the two follow-up interviews, the participants delved more deeply into their decisions about the timing of their final day, preparation of legal documents, tensions they felt in prioritizing their needs over their loved ones’ needs, and personal values that appeared salient in their decision-making. Additionally, the second interview helped us to better understand how decisions emerge within the complexity of illness uncertainty, and how the progression of disease, inner self-dialogue, interpersonal communication, and other factors change over time. Interviews occurred on Zoom and lasted between 35–93 min (average 52 min). An initial transcript was produced by Zoom and edited by the second author while watching the video to enhance accuracy.

Table 2
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Table 2. Semi-structured interview guide (United States, 2024).

Data Analysis

The first three authors participated in data analysis, incorporating Finlay’s [49] approach to entering into a phenomenological mindset and Wertz’s [50, 51]and Ashworth’s [52] methods for analyzing phenomenological data. Prior to coding data, the first three authors individually read all nine transcripts to discern the overall landscape of the data. Each individually coded the first interview and then met as a team to discuss initial thematic insights. Ashworth’s [52] lifeworld framework guided our monitoring for how participants portrayed their (1) values; (2) embodied health, ability, and emotions; (3) space and place in society; (4) reflections about temporal factors; and (5) political and cultural discourse surrounding their pursuit of MAID.

Following Wertz’s [50, 51] guidance for phenomenological psychological analysis, we completed the following four analytic steps: (1) determined general experiences within individual interviews; (2) compared experiences across individuals to discern general and disparate experiences in approaching MAID; (3) performed imaginative variation to ascertain invariant meanings among participants’ experiences; and (4) developed an overall framework to represent the phenomenon of terminally ill individuals’ decision-making experiences in pursuing MAID in the United States. Within the context of this study, imaginative variation entailed our team freely imaging which aspects of the decision-making process about MAID are essential to the experience of MAID decision making and, if removed, which parts of the participants’ experience are not essential to the phenomenon. For instance, we discussed the differences in illness uncertainty around the timing of being able to self-ingest aid in dying medications among those with malignant and nonmalignant terminal conditions. We freely imagined which factors of the experience within and across participants with malignant and nonmalignant conditions were essential to the phenomenon of MAID decision-making and which factors, if removed, did not appear to change the overall phenomenon of illness uncertainty around self-ingestion.

Trustworthiness

The study incorporated numerous quality checks through the study design, implementation, data analysis and presentation of findings [53, 54]. Our process for multicoder data analysis included individual readings of all interviews and meeting together weekly throughout the data analysis phase to discuss coding processes. When disparities in coding occurred, we discussed nuances until we reached consensus. We created a matrix using a qualitative software program, MAXQDA, version 2022 [55] to track development and revision of lifeworld experiences, code and meaning saturation [56], and meaning-based and analytic memos. The aim of phenomenological studies is to pursue saturation across cases instead of within cases [57] and to gather an understanding of commonalities, and different interpretations based on different lived experiences [58]. Based on the participants’ energy levels and willingness to share, we spent at least 30 min and up to 180 min with participants. This allowed us to gather an expansive understanding of their nuanced and common experiences in pursuing MAID. We ensured that all participants’ common understandings and individual explanations of MAID decision-making were adequately coded through ongoing independent coding and group discussions until no new codes/themes emerged.

Results

The phenomenon of approaching medical aid in dying in the United States is a complex life process that involves an intricate intertwining of one’s relationship with their body, time, values, and relationships with others and systems, including legal or policy requirements based on their space/place in the world. Although separate lifeworlds in the experience of seeking and preparing for aid in dying, each appear interconnected and dependent on the body in its terminal state.

Living in a Terminally Ill Body

The decision to pursue MAID evolved after months to years of health uncertainty living in physical frames which no longer supported their ability to pursue life’s purpose or essential activities of daily living. Habitual physical activities now required intentional planning and left participants yearning for bodily transparency and certainty that their bodies would sustain function in the coming days. Their bodies became “jackets” (Linda) or shells that housed vital organs with minimal functionality in the real world. For some, their physical decline was gradual and transparent, while others lived with constant uncertainty of when their bodies would reach a point where they “are in a coma parked in a corner of the room” (Nancy). A physician with keen knowledge of the body portrayed this embodied tension: “It’s a regular downhill course but it doesn’t tell me when it’s going to end” (George). Distressing physical symptoms weighed heavily in choosing MAID, including excruciating muscle and nerve pain, cancer’s spread to vital organs, loss of feeling or control of limbs, and declining ability to breathe or swallow.

Eventually each participant reached a relationship with their body where they deemed it expedient to pursue aid in dying. Those with cancer commonly pursued curative or stabilizing cancer treatments but made conscious decisions to stop cancer therapy when the suffering from treatment-related side effects exceeded the benefits of life extension. As portrayed by a woman dreading another excruciating malignant ascites abstraction, “I can’t do any more treatment and I just can’t. My body will not allow me. My body was screaming, ‘No. No more’” (Cheryl). Unmanageable pain emerged as paramount in her decision to end chemotherapy. A palliative care physician with a terminal cancer shared her newfound insights on the limitations of pain management:

[Hospice] can be a really good way to die. And then to find out myself that I had this pain that could not be managed really made me realize that there were probably many deaths that were much more uncomfortable than I ever appreciated (Mary).

Of note, the majority of individuals chose to discontinue curative medical treatments and enroll in hospice services.

Dwelling in the Tension Between Self and Others

At the end of their lives, illness robbed participants of the physical function necessary for maintaining social roles. For example, Linda chose MAID primarily because the disease had forced her to give up a career that gave her purpose and transformed her interactions between “wife and husband” into “patient and caregiver,” leaving a sense of crisis in fulfilling her role as a family member. For most participants, the inability to perform social roles seriously threatened their identity and sense of worth as well as their perception of being “useful” (Lorraine) to others and to themselves.

Socioculturally and historically constructed memories associated with death influenced how participants defined and chose a “good death.” Nancy did not want to be “stuck like a rock in the corner” like her mother, and Mary yearned to avoid going through the “awful death” she saw some of her family members experience. Both participants chose MAID to gain control of what their last days would look like. Death-related memories also led many participants to consider what kind of legacy they would leave behind, like the image of a healthy mother (Cheryl) or being a change-maker through sharing their MAID story (Linda). Additionally, participants’ narratives included pleasant memories of the past, such as family trips (Lorraine), successful careers (Linda), and days of health and vitality (Cheryl), which reduced their regret at facing death but led to lower satisfaction with their current quality of life.

Choosing MAID meant relief for most participants, but for their families and friends, a range of meanings emerged, including the loss of a loved one, a betrayal of faith, and a decline in hope, creating a conflict over their shared meaning. For example, Dorothy declined to tell all of her family and friends about her choice because she worried they wouldn’t accept it. Frequently, loved ones gained a shared understanding of the decision to pursue MAID by witnessing participants’ suffering. Cheryl’s children unexpectedly supported her choice after observing the ravages of chemotherapy’s side effects.

Illness caused shame and embarrassment for most participants because they were not able to control or present their bodies as healthy people and, therefore, no longer looked “normal” to others; thus, exacerbating their sense that reality is uninhabitable: “You might leave a puddle of water at your table on the floor from your leaking leg, and nobody knows what the hell is wrong with [you]. So, [I] know about bathrooms. I mean, it’s not pleasant at all” (Dorothy).

Compared to dying naturally or “fighting” until the end, MAID is not universally embraced by society because it is not seen as a socially sanctioned way to approach one’s dying process. The resulting controversy and stigma undermined participants’ sense of the legitimacy of their choices and added pressure to their decisions and psychosocial wellbeing at the end of life.

Perceiving Time in an Ill World

The perception of internal and external countdowns forced participants to the “razor’s edge of timing” (Linda), increasing their decisional urgency. Their internal decline led to decreased bodily function; the bad days gradually outnumbered the good ones. As Nancy explained, “I’m tracking my body, I can see that it’s going down, I can see, this would be the optimal time to take this drug.” For elderly participants, aging compounded the loss of functionality. Dorothy also shared, “You’re too old, you can’t … if you fixed any part of it, there’s still three more things that aren't working right, so what is the point in hanging around.”

Externally, participants received evidence from a third perspective, their terminal prognosis, that that death was indeed imminent. In contrast to participants’ embodied perception of time, medical professionals perceived time more objectively. Nancy explained, “When I talked to my nurse through hospice, she was saying, ‘Well, you probably have a month to live or maybe a month and a half.’”

The legal requirements for MAID created tension around timing death. Although they were able to have more control over their deaths, participants commonly worried about losing control if their cognitive or self-administration abilities diminished. Therefore, every person had to spend their last days constantly surveilling their physical condition. As Nancy said, it was like “a crazy dance.” Moreover, they had no control over how the disease interacted with other concurrent life events on the timeline, adding complexity to their decisions. The COVID-19 pandemic led Dorothy to worry that the virus would erase her ability to choose MAID.

The disease also deprived the participants of temporal possibilities, driving them to make proactive decisions rather than wait for the hand of fate. They could not go back to their past identities. As Lorraine shared, “After the stroke, I decided I’m not ever going to be able to do the things that I’ve done before.” The present moment was no longer bearable because their body could no longer support them. Dorothy described, “Living like this is not living, so I’m ready to go.” Parallel to this, the future was no longer accessible as their days became numbered. Although Cheryl wanted to stay and spend Christmas with her loved ones, she believed that cancer would not allow this family celebration.

Values as Anchors in a Shifting Situation

Values were foundational to decision-making throughout the MAID process, enabling participants to make deliberate decisions amid profound uncertainty, especially around eligibility, receipt of medications, and timing. Each participant understood MAID as an alternative to a natural death—an option—instead of the only path forward and anchored their decisions in spoken values of personal agency and control, even in the face of conflicting priorities. Cheryl explained, “If you decide you don’t want to use it, you don’t have to, and that was really key for me. Because to be honest, doing this really goes against all of my spiritual beliefs.” Mary acknowledged MAID as “another way” that “advance[s] the process that’s happening anyway,” finding a profound sense of relief in preserving the capacity to choose in a position of limited options, or perceivably none at all.

Some wrestled with the consequences of shifting values while actively making choices in a dying body. Nancy described MAID as “scary,” saying that “it’s not who I am as a person generally. I still am coming to terms with that reality.” Asked what she meant, she responded, “I am not a person that would do suicide or kill myself.” Individually, the body’s biological processes marched on, and values that undergirded decisions came under pressure; most explained that either they could choose MAID or death would choose them. In light of this, Lorraine described the importance of control with conviction and reprieve: “I’ve made my decision and I’m not changing my mind.”

A perpetual value tension hovered over controlling the day of death, framed frequently as a trade-off. George shared, “you also need to understand what you are giving up by staying and what you are giving up by dying.” Control sat uneasily among other personal sources of meaning, as he explained:

By dying, you lose the pleasure of relating to people, special talks, books, wonderful kindness of your caregivers. You don’t want to leave each other. By living, you are also losing connections and important people to you. You have the symptoms which brought you here to start with.

Despite this, decisions were bearable as participants held irreconcilable values and existential unease that often persisted until their Last Day.

Agency as a Tool to Navigate Social (Mis)Fortune

All seven participants acknowledged a combination of social advantages contributing to their agency and ability to come to the final decision. Popular rhetoric emphasizing a patient’s own choice and dignity was complicated by stories of MAID constrained by external factors, including legal, economic, social, temporal, and relational demands. Mary labeled MAID an “entitled service” while Cheryl called it a “luxury,” having had ample time to research the intricacies of the journey. Despite this, she shared, “So you know, I went through hell. The MAID process is not exactly easy. They make it really annoying,” hinting at the time, energy, and stamina required.

Connections to the healthcare system were vital to spurring the decision-making process forward. Plans were made with the help of “insider” information from clinicians across the medical hierarchy, typically through physicians connected to supporting organizations or with previous histories supporting MAID. For example, Mary’s primary care doctor, barred by law to discuss the option in a federal clinic, referred her to a palliative care clinician and comfortingly, “The process was incredibly streamlined from there on, once [they] knew who to talk to.” Linda, despite “anger and rage at the machine” in securing a formal diagnosis for her neurological illness, found available physicians through Compassion & Choices’ website.

Accessing the legal option and final medication “cocktail” depended largely on securing a place in a MAID-eligible, safe location. Although most of those living in facilities were forced to find alternative locations to self-administer aid in dying medications due to facility policies, a few found a ready place in a family member’s home: “My daughter said we could do it at her house, but we had other choices.” (Lorraine). Others confronted more distressing alternatives. Linda spoke with frustration about how her hand was forced, relocating from the state where she and her children were raised. Holding up photos of herself perched on a bridge between two state lines, she reflected on the irrationality of legal availability:

So, I’m standing on the river because I taught geography for many years. There is this, there is this arbitrary body of water that has changed course over the millennia many times and because I’m on one side of it, I could not access what I would have liked (Linda).

For each person, the right state and physical spot became the difference between a plan and a hard-won, relieving reality.

Discussion

Findings from this study provide novel understanding of the layered context of decision-making involved with the pursuit and ingestion of aid in dying medications in the United States. We reveal the decisional calculus that terminally ill individuals factor between aspects of their five lifeworlds--lived body, social space, temporality, values, and agency--as they plan for death. In addition to a congregation of physical symptoms, emotions ranging from relief and hope to anxiety appeared across all five lifeworlds.

MAID presents opportunities to circumvent the arrival of social death before physical death, which enables the intentional choreographing of death before individuals are unable to recognize themselves, in line with the Western sociocultural construction of a “good death” [59, 60]. In practice, however, medicolegal structures underlying MAID in the United States do not permit complete independence and control; instead, they require solid social relations to support their desires [59]. The results of this study illustrate that divergent interpretations of MAID can provoke meaning-sharing conflicts between participants and their loved ones. The perception of MAID as a social and ethical stain turns the practice into “dirty work” for some healthcare providers [61], (p535) reinforcing stigmas that arise when deviating from “normal” [62]. Thus, adding obstacles to terminal patients’ legitimate healthcare claims and unjust social pressures during their precious final days.

In the world of the terminally ill, their embodied experience of time overshadows objective time on a calendar [63, 64]. Choosing MAID adds temporal tension, that is, fearing that the timing of death would occur too soon or too late. Furthermore, our findings echo existing research: a happy past is distant, a focused present is narrow, and a limited future is unpredictable [6365]. We identified that participants’ perceptions of time were informed by their lived experience of their body’s shrinking ability; thus, highlighting the imperative for healthcare providers to be attuned to and deliver care that is in synch with their patients’ needs [63].

Values and medical aid-in-dying scholarship have historically focused on perspectives of healthcare workers [6668], family members [6972], and the public [73, 74]. Our study complicates simple notions of aid-in-dying as a person’s choice and way to maintain one’s dignity [75]. Anchored values like control and choice competed with other valued aspects of their lives, including their loved ones, spirituality, and the meaning attached to living another day.

Participants’ stories extend existing research on the relationship between the EOL and “relational autonomy” [17, 76, 77] that account for factors outside of an individual’s control, especially during a time of heightened dependence. Findings strengthen layered accounts of participants needing to receive substantial help as they navigate obstacles posed by bureaucratic guidelines, inconsistencies in the medical system, and structural disadvantages [31, 78, 79].

Implications for Practice and Policy

Participants’ narratives highlight opportunities for advocacy, support and care systems to reduce tensions of terminally ill individuals seeking MAID, including the development of psychoeducational resources to prepare them for potential stress resulting from bodily uncertainty and structural and social barriers they may encounter in preparing for self-ingestion. Ideally, those seeking MAID and their caregivers could have access to peer support groups before and after a MAID death to normalize their experiences, gather guidance, and find emotional support through this often disenfranchised process. Providers should proactively educate and prepare patients and loved ones about the potential for psychological distress around the timing of death. Healthcare teams can share checklists or videos for their clients to help them prepare for the tasks leading up to and including the day of death, such as local death doula resources, MAID support organizations, or former families that they have worked with who would be willing to mentor others beginning the MAID process. Many checklists address medical tasks and the additional of psychological and existential factors to be aware of may also be of benefit. Psychoeducation and support programs like Washington and Oregon’s End-of Life and other state non-profit support organizations can assuage logistical fears and normalize the strains individuals face preparing for a MAID death.

From a macro perspective, the revision of state and federal policies may be influential in reducing the distress experienced by those seeking MAID. Pope [80] details ten examples of macro approaches to reduce barriers to MAID access in the U.S. A few examples include proposing legislation to shorten or waive the mandatory waiting periods between terminally ill individuals’ requests for MAID and enabling advanced practice nurses to serve as authorizing providers.

Limitations

Limitations from this phenomenological study include the narratives reflecting solely terminally ill individuals’ perspectives. Additionally, the phenomenon represented here portrays the perspectives of those living in the U.S.; those living in other countries with more expansive eligibility requirements may portray their decision-making about an aid in dying death differently. Two participants’ follow-up interviews afforded us the opportunity to discuss in-the-moment decisional changes, while the other participants retrospectively recollected changes. Participants brought heterogeneous physical experiences, yet had similar race and ethnicity, educational attainment, and access to financial and health resources. Future MAID research should integrate diverse participant narratives to understand decision-making considerations among those from socially or financially marginalized groups, as well as terminally ill individuals’ loved ones’ perspectives, both pre-and post-death.

Conclusion

Our study represents a MAID “new frontier” [30] that explores the nuances of patient experiences to inform future patients, loved ones, and clinicians as they make realistic, honest decisions about death.

Ethics Statement

The studies involving humans were approved by the Colorado State University Institutional Review Board. The studies were conducted in accordance with the local legislation and institutional requirements. Written informed consent for participation in this study was provided by the participants.

Author Contributions

JC-M and KM contributed to the design of the study. JC-M, NG, and YW performed the data analysis. All authors contributed to the article and approved the submitted version.

Funding

The author(s) declare that financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. Funding was received from Colorado State University for the development of the research protocol and study materials. Compassion and Choices and the American Clinicians Academy on Medical Aid in Dying provided a financial donation to support KM’s time to co-facilitate interviews and graduate students’ (NG and YW) time in analyzing data.

Conflict of Interest

JC-M and KM are volunteers for the state chapter of Compassion and Choices and participate in their monthly volunteer meeting to discuss the status of Colorado’s End-of-Life Options Act.

Author KM was employed by Practically Dying, Inc.

The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

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Keywords: values, medical aid in dying, phenomenology, end-of-life decision making, timing

Citation: Currin-McCulloch J, Gallo N, Wang Y and Mooney K (2024) “The Razor’s Edge of Timing:” A Phenomenological Analysis of Decision-Making Processes Surrounding Medical Aid in Dying. Int J Public Health 69:1607435. doi: 10.3389/ijph.2024.1607435

Received: 27 April 2024; Accepted: 20 August 2024;
Published: 30 August 2024.

Edited by:

Andres Ricardo Schneeberger, University of California, San Diego, United States

Reviewed by:

Uwe Güth, University of Basel, Switzerland
One reviewer who chose to remain anonymous

Copyright © 2024 Currin-McCulloch, Gallo, Wang and Mooney. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Jennifer Currin-McCulloch, amVuLmN1cnJpbi1tY2N1bGxvY2hAY29sb3N0YXRlLmVkdQ==

This Original Article is part of the PHR Special Issue “Medical Aid in Dying: A Societal Challenge”

Disclaimer: All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.