| Literature DB >> 27829409 |
Lisbeth Thoresen1, Lillian Lillemoen2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: As part of the research project "End-of-life Communication in Nursing Homes. Patient Preferences and Participation", we have studied how Advance Care Planning (ACP) is carried out in eight Norwegian nursing homes. The concept of ACP is a process for improving patient autonomy and communication in the context of progressive illness, anticipated deterioration and end-of-life care. While an individualistic autonomy based attitude is at the fore in most studies on ACP, there is a lack of empirical studies on how family members' participation and involvement in ACP- conversations may promote nursing home patients' participation in decisions on future treatment and end-of-life care. Based on empirical data and family ethics perspectives, the purpose of this study is to add insights to the complexity of ACP-conversations and illuminate how a family ethics perspective may improve the quality of the ACP and promote nursing home patients' participation in advance care planning.Entities:
Keywords: Advance Care Planning; Autonomy; Family ethics; Qualitative study
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27829409 PMCID: PMC5103414 DOI: 10.1186/s12910-016-0156-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med Ethics ISSN: 1472-6939 Impact factor: 2.652
Overview research project
| Research project: end-of-life communication in nursing homes. Patient preferences and participation | |
|---|---|
| Part 1 Literature review on implementation and research strategies of ACP in nursing homes | Part 3 Developing, implementing and evaluating a guide for ACP in nursing homes |
| Part 2 A) Survey to all Norwegian nursing homes to investigate practice and prevalence of ACP | |
Detailed information on ACP-conversations and participants
| Nursing home | Conversation term | Patient | Relatives present | Staff present | Place and length | Template for ACP questions? |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | Admission conversation | Woman, 91, stroke, aphasia, in wheelchair. Married. | Daughter | Physician, primary nurse, head nurse | Duty room 30 minutes | Yes |
| B | Admission conversation | Woman, 89, wheelchair, amputee leg, blind. Widow. | Daughter | Physician, nursing assistant, two nurses, head nurse | Duty room 30 minutes | Yes |
| C | Preparatory conversation Routinely held when patient was diagnosed as dying. | Woman, not present, 90, severe dementia, married. | Husband, son, daughter. | Physician, nurse | Meeting room, 45 minutes | Yes |
| D | Bi- annual conversation | Man, 80, stroke, wheelchair, married | Wife | Physician | Patient’s room 25-30 minutes | No |
| E | Admission conversation | Woman, 87, early dementia, seems healthy, single? | Niece | Physician, intern, primary nurse | Living room, 50 minutes | No |
| F | Bi-annual conversation | Woman, 88, stroke, aphasia, widow | Son | Physician, nurse, nurse student | Living room, 30 minutes | No |
| G | No observation | |||||
| H | Admission conversation | Woman, 100, early dementia, severe hearing loss | Daughter, son in law | Physician, nurse, head nurse | Patient’s room, 70 minutes | Yes |