The Impact of Varying Levels of Advance Care Planning Engagement on Perceptions of the End-of-Life Experience Among Caregivers of Deceased Patients With Cancer
- PMID: 32281390
- PMCID: PMC7484284
- DOI: 10.1177/1049909120917899
The Impact of Varying Levels of Advance Care Planning Engagement on Perceptions of the End-of-Life Experience Among Caregivers of Deceased Patients With Cancer
Abstract
Context: Advance care planning (ACP) is used to prepare patients and caregivers for future "in the moment" decisions at the end-of-life. Patients with cancer generally do not engage in all 3 components of ACP (documented living will, health-care surrogate, end-of-life discussions); however, little is known about the impact of these varying levels of ACP engagement on caregivers postdeath.
Objective: To examine the relationship between varying levels of ACP engagement and caregivers' perceptions of cancer decedents' end-of-life experiences.
Methods: A secondary analysis of the 2002 to 2014 waves of the Health and Retirement Study data using structural equation modeling was conducted. Five levels of ACP engagement were defined: full (discussions/documents), augmented discussions, documents only, discussions only, and no engagement.
Results: Among the 2172 cancer death cases, the analyzed sample included 983 cases where end-of-life decisions occurred. Compared to no ACP, all levels of ACP were significantly associated with caregivers' positive perceptions of cancer decedents' end-of-life experiences (P ≤ .001), controlling for sex, race, and Hispanic ethnicity (R 2 = .21). However, the relative impact of each level of ACP engagement was not equal; full engagement (β = .61) was associated with a greater impact compared to each of the partial levels of engagement (augmented discussions [β = .33], documents only [β = .17], discussions only [β = .17]).
Conclusion: Partial ACP engagement, not just nonengagement, serves as an important clinically modifiable target to improve the end-of-life care experience among patients with cancer and the perceptions of those experiences among bereaved caregivers.
Keywords: advance care planning; advance directive; bereavement; cancer; caregiver; end-of-life.
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References
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- Committee on Approaching Death. Dying in America: improving quality and honoring individual preferences near the end of life Institute of Medicine. Washington, D.C.: The National Academies Press; 2015. - PubMed
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- National Institute of Nursing Research. End-of-life and palliative care [Internet]. n.d. Available from: https://www.ninr.nih.gov/newsandinformation/iq/eolpc-workshop. Accessed January 8, 2020.
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- United States Department of Health and Human Services, Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation, Office of Disability Aging and Long-Term Care Policy. Advance directives and advance care planning: report to congress. 2008. Available from: https://aspe.hhs.gov/sites/default/files/pdf/75811/ADCongRpt.pdf. Access January 8, 2020.
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