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- Laraine Winter, Marie P Dennis, and Barbara Parker.
- Center for Applied Research on Aging and Health, Thomas Jefferson University, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia 19107, USA. Laraine.Winter@Jefferson.edu
- Omega (Westport). 2008 Feb 27;56(3):273-88.
AbstractResearch on end-of-life treatment preferences has documented robust racial differences, with African-Americans preferring more life-prolonging treatment than Whites. Although little research has attempted to explain these racial differences systematically, speculation has centered on religiosity. We examined a dimension of religiosity frequently invoked in end-of-life research-guidance by God's will-as a potential mediator of racial differences in such treatment preferences. Three hundred African-American and White men and women aged 60 or older participated in a 35-minute telephone interview that elicited preferences for four common life-prolonging treatments in each of nine health scenarios. The questionnaire included the five-item God's will (GW) scale, a health conditions checklist, a depression measure, and sociodemographic questions. GW mediated racial differences at least partially for most treatments and in most health scenarios. Implications are discussed for understanding end-of-life treatment preferences and why races tend to differ.
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