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Table 4 Relationship between attitudes of participants and frustration

From: Managing the advanced cancer patient in the Australian emergency department environment: findings from a national survey of emergency department clinicians

  

“I feel frustrated that I cannot provide the care to patients with advanced cancer that I would like to provide”

Item

n (%)

Strongly disagree/neutral/disagree

Agree/strongly agree

p values

Overcrowding in the ED makes it an inappropriate location for patients with advanced cancer

Agree/strongly agree

107 (66.0)

405 (89.8)

<.001

Strongly disagree/disagree/neutral

55 (34.0)

46 (10.2)

The ED is too noisy to allow adequate care of patients with advanced cancer

Agree/strongly agree

76 (46.9)

348 (77.2)

<.001

Strongly disagree/disagree/neutral

86 (53.1)

103 (22.8)

There is enough time in the ED to adequately assess patients with advanced cancer

Agree/strongly agree

66 (40.7)

120 (26.6)

.001

Strongly disagree/disagree/neutral

96 (59.3)

331 (73.4)

There is not enough time in the ED to adequately care for patients with advanced cancer

Agree/strongly agree

67 (41.4)

315 (69.8)

<.001

Strongly disagree/disagree/neutral

95 (58.6)

136 (30.2)

The ED lacks the necessary privacy to care appropriately for patients with advanced cancer

Agree/strongly agree

92 (56.8)

383 (84.9)

<.001

Strongly disagree/disagree/neutral

70 (43.2)

68 (15.1)

Access block prevents me from providing optimal care to patients with advanced cancer

Agree/strongly agree

90 (55.6)

400 (88.7)

<.001

Strongly disagree/disagree/neutral

72 (44.4)

51 (11.3)

The dying patient should be allocated a space in ED that is private

Agree/strongly agree

143 (88.3)

429 (95.1)

.005

Strongly disagree/disagree/neutral

19 (11.7)

22 (4.9)

The ED is a reasonable fall-back option for patients with advanced cancer

Agree/strongly agree

81 (50.0)

148 (32.8)

<.001

Strongly disagree/disagree/neutral

81 (50.0)

303 (67.2)