Failure to engage hospitalized elderly patients and their families in advance care planning
- PMID: 23545563
- DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.180
Failure to engage hospitalized elderly patients and their families in advance care planning
Abstract
Importance: Advance care planning can improve patient-centered care and potentially reduce intensification of care at the end of life.
Objectives: To inquire about patients' advance care planning activities before hospitalization and preferences for care from the perspectives of patients and family members, as well as to measure real-time concordance between expressed preferences for care and documentation of those preferences in the medical record.
Design: Prospective study.
Setting: Twelve acute care hospitals in Canada.
Participants: Elderly patients who were at high risk of dying in the next 6 months and their family members.
Main outcome measures: Responses to an in-person administered questionnaire and concordance of expressed preferences and orders of care documented in the medical record.
Results: Of 513 patients and 366 family members approached, 278 patients (54.2%) and 225 family members (61.5%) consented to participate. The mean ages of patients and family members were 80.0 and 60.8 years, respectively. Before hospitalization, most patients (76.3%) had thought about end-of-life (EOL) care, and only 11.9% preferred life-prolonging care; 47.9% of patients had completed an advance care plan, and 73.3% had formally named a surrogate decision maker for health care. Of patients who had discussed their wishes, only 30.3% had done so with the family physician and 55.3% with any member of the health care team. Agreement between patients' expressed preferences for EOL care and documentation in the medical record was 30.2%. Family members' perspectives were similar to those of patients.
Conclusions and relevance: Many elderly patients at high risk of dying and their family members have expressed preferences for medical treatments at the EOL. However, communication with health care professionals and documentation of these preferences remains inadequate. Efforts to reduce this significant medical error of omission are warranted.
Comment in
-
Disregard of patients' preferences is a medical error: comment on "Failure to engage hospitalized elderly patients and their families in advance care planning".JAMA Intern Med. 2013 May 13;173(9):787. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.203. JAMA Intern Med. 2013. PMID: 23545699 No abstract available.
-
The majority of hospitalised elderly people at high risk of dying have thought about end-of-life care, though documentation of preferences in medical records may be lacking.Evid Based Nurs. 2014 Jul;17(3):96. doi: 10.1136/eb-2013-101503. Epub 2013 Sep 19. Evid Based Nurs. 2014. PMID: 24052579 No abstract available.
Publication types
MeSH terms
Grants and funding
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Other Literature Sources
Medical