Exploring the impacts of a coffin-lying experience on life and death attitudes of medical and nursing students: preliminary findings

BMC Med Educ. 2023 Jan 5;23(1):6. doi: 10.1186/s12909-022-03975-7.

Abstract

Background: Physicians and nurses often exhibit strong negative emotional and behavioral reactions when patients they care for die, and death education helps them cope with these difficulties. When implementing death education, the literature shows that experiential activities are more effective than lecturing, and progressive exposure is the best way to reduce death anxieties. This study examined the effects of coffin-lying, an activity sometimes seen in Asian cultures, on life and death attitudes of medical and nursing students.

Methods: During a period from 2020 to 2021, 134 medical and nursing students from a medical university in northern Taiwan voluntarily participated in this study. Among them, 53 were in the experimental group, who participated in a coffin-lying activity for nearly 3 hours, and the other 81 were in the control group. All participants filled out questionnaires 1 week before the activity (T1), 1 week after the activity (T2), and 6 ~ 11 weeks after the activity (T3). Three waves of data were analyzed by a repeated-measure multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA).

Results: The effects of "love and care" and "feeling of existence" were only manifested at T2, however, the scores of "fear of death" and "death avoidance" between the experimental and control groups significantly differed at T2 and T3. In addition, there were no significant differences between the experimental and control groups in "neutral acceptance", "approach acceptance", or "escape acceptance".

Conclusions: The coffin-lying activity based on desensitization was effective in improving "fear of death" and "death avoidance", and the effects were sustained to 6 ~ 11 weeks. Coffin-lying is not only a well-designed activity that quickly reduces negative tendencies toward death, but it is also worth adopting by medical and nursing schools to make death education more comprehensive.

Keywords: Coffin-lying; Death attitude; Death education; Medical education.

MeSH terms

  • Analysis of Variance
  • Attitude of Health Personnel
  • Attitude to Death*
  • Coffin-Lowry Syndrome
  • Emotions
  • Fear
  • Humans
  • Students, Medical*
  • Students, Nursing* / psychology
  • Surveys and Questionnaires