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. 2019 Oct 4;20:66. doi: 10.1186/s12910-019-0401-y

Table 3.

Overview of themes, categories and codes

THEMES CATEGORIES CODES
Evaluation of the euthanasia request Reasons for rejection ⋅ too late in the dementia trajectory
⋅ no repeated clear request
⋅ mental incompetence
Reasons for acceptance ⋅ unbearable suffering in future
⋅ has to feel right
⋅ repeated clear convincing request
Difficulties experienced by doctors Timing ⋅ different timing and agenda’s of doctors and patients
⋅ diagnosis takes too long
Workload ⋅ work pressure
⋅ long preparation
⋅ labor-intensive
Pressure by relatives ⋅ pressure by family
⋅ request from family
⋅ part of the suffering lies with the family
Influence from society ⋅ society not dementia-friendly
⋅ euthanasia is considered a good death
⋅ negative perspective on dementia
⋅ slippery slope regarding granting euthanasia
⋅ changed perspective on death and dying
⋅ autonomy is leading
Patient-doctor communication ⋅ difficult communication due to dementia
⋅ conversation with or without family
Law, due care criteria and the guidelines ⋅ unbearable suffering is unclear
⋅ judging mental competence difficult
⋅ vague guidelines
⋅ AED not useful in dementia cases
⋅ AED are complicated
Expertise Individual (GPs + elderly care physicians) ⋅ improves quality on care
⋅ experiences reduces fear
⋅ infrequency
Organizational (SCEN and end-of-life clinic) ⋅ pros: more time for patients, safety net, legal support
⋅ cons: stigmatization, contributes to slippery slope, no negative view on euthanasia
Support and coping Improvement of existing conditions ⋅ colleagues and other professionals
⋅ buddy system
⋅ emotional support by own family
⋅ too costly to implement
Alternatives to euthanasia ⋅ assisted suicide
⋅ palliative care (palliative sedation)
Doctor’s emotions Negative - nervous
⋅ frustrated
⋅angriness
⋅ restless·
Positive ⋅ relief and satisfaction
⋅ feeling of control
⋅ heroism