A Systematic Review of Death Anxiety and Related Factors Among Nurses.
Masoumeh NorouziPooyan Ghorbani VajargahAtefeh FalakdamiAmirabbas MollaeiPoorya TakasiMohammad Javad GhazanfariSahar MiriNazila Javadi-PashakiJoseph OsujiYasaman SoltaniIraj AghaeiMahmood MoosazadehAmir Emami ZeydiSamad KarkhahPublished in: Omega (2022)
This systematic review aimed to summarize the evidence regarding death anxiety (DA) and related factors among nurses. Scopus, PubMed, Web of Science, Iranmedex, and Scientific Information Database (SID) databases were extensively searched using purpose-related keywords from the earliest to October 5, 2021. A total of 6819 nurses were included in 31 studies. The DA of nurses based on the Templer's Death Anxiety Scale was moderate. Factors such as personal anxiety, frequency and severity of job stress, burnout, dying patient avoidance behavior, euthanasia, sex, mental health status, social desirability, attitude toward the elderly, humor, social maturity, psychological hardiness, quality of life, lack of social activity, self-efficacy, coping with death, and life satisfaction were associated with nurses' DA. Therefore, nursing policymakers can promote nurses' health to improve the quality of nursing care by considering these related factors.