| Literature DB >> 29886439 |
Rachel Louise Daly1, Frances Bunn1, Claire Goodman1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Shared decision-making is recognised as an important element of person-centred dementia care.Entities:
Keywords: Care Homes; Cognitive Impairment; Day-to-Day Care; Dementia; Everyday Care; Extended Care; Residential Care; Shared Decision-Making
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29886439 PMCID: PMC6009462 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-018977
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Study inclusion criteria
| Publication language | English |
| Publication dates | January 1996 to October 2016 |
| Target population | Adults, aged over 18 years, with any type of cognitive impairment, for example (but not limited to), dementia, learning disabilities, Parkinson’s and Huntington’s diseases |
| Study setting | Community living at home or extended care settings, for example, supported living, or residential care. Studies must be considered transferable to people living with a cognitive impairment in an extended care setting (eg, the person living with a cognitive impairment must be in receipt of care in addition to that provided by a family care partner and the resource should be suitable for implementation in extended care settings). |
| Study types | All research designs including quantitative and qualitative research |
| Primary outcomes | Any outcome relating to involvement in care planning, satisfaction with decision (eg, care was congruent with expressed choice), quality of life or well-being, and behavioural changes (eg, reduction in distress) |
| Additional outcomes | Family care partner and/or health or care professional satisfaction, and any documented adverse effects (eg, falls, weight loss, adverse outcomes related to medication management) |
Electronic databases searched, and search terms used
| Electronic databases searched | CINAHL Plus, PubMed, the Cochrane Library, NICE Evidence, OpenGrey, Autism Data, Google Scholar, Scopus and MedicinesComplete |
| MeSH search terms (with subheadings included) | Cognition Disorders searched ((((“dementia”[MeSH Terms] OR “dementia”[All Fields]) OR (“cognitive dysfunction”[MeSH Terms] OR (“cognitive”[All Fields] AND “dysfunction”[All Fields]) OR “cognitive dysfunction”[All Fields] OR (“cognitive”[All Fields] AND “impairment”[All Fields]) OR “cognitive impairment”[All Fields])) OR (“learning disorders”[MeSH Terms] OR (“learning”[All Fields] AND “disorders”[All Fields]) OR “learning disorders”[All Fields] OR (“learning”[All Fields] AND “disability”[All Fields]) OR “learning disability”[All Fields])) OR (“learning disorders”[MeSH Terms] OR (“learning”[All Fields] AND “disorders”[All Fields]) OR “learning disorders”[All Fields] OR (“learning”[All Fields] AND “disorder”[All Fields] OR “learning disorder”[All Fields])) OR (“autistic disorder”[MeSH Terms] OR (“autistic”[All Fields] AND “disorder”[All Fields]) OR “autistic disorder”[All Fields] OR “autism”[All Fields])) OR (“stroke”[MeSH Terms] OR “stroke”[All Fields])) OR (“brain injuries”[MeSH Terms] OR (“brain”[All Fields] AND “injuries”[All Fields]) OR “brain injuries”[All Fields] OR (“brain”[All Fields] AND “injury”[All Fields]) OR “brain injury”[All Fields])) OR (“neurocognitive disorders”[MeSH Terms] OR (“neurocognitive”[All Fields] AND “disorders”[All Fields]) OR “neurocognitive disorders”[All Fields])) OR (“alzheimer disease”[MeSH Terms] OR (“alzheimer”[All Fields] AND “disease”[All Fields]) OR “alzheimer disease”[All Fields] OR “alzheimer”[All Fields])) AND Shared Decision-making (((((((shared[All Fields] AND (“Decision (Wash D C)“[Journal] OR “decision”[All Fields])) OR (“decision-making”[MeSH Terms] OR (“decision”[All Fields] AND “making”[All Fields]) OR “decision-making”[All Fields])) OR (“community participation”[MeSH Terms] OR (“community”[All Fields] AND “participation”[All Fields]) OR “community participation”[All Fields] OR (“consumer”[All Fields] AND “participation”[All Fields]) OR “consumer participation”[All Fields])) OR (“patient participation”[MeSH Terms] OR (“patient”[All Fields] AND “participation”[All Fields]) OR “patient participation”[All Fields])) OR ((“Decision (Wash D C) “[Journal] OR “decision”[All Fields]) AND support[All Fields])) OR (care[All Fields] AND dyad[All Fields])) OR (“patient education handout”[Publication Type] OR “patient education as topic”[MeSH Terms] OR “patient education”[All Fields]))) NOT (((advance[All Fields] AND (“Decision (Wash D C)“[Journal] OR “decision”[All Fields])) OR (“advance directives”[MeSH Terms] OR (“advance”[All Fields] AND “directives”[All Fields]) OR “advance directives”[All Fields] OR (“advance”[All Fields] AND “directive”[All Fields]) OR “advance directive”[All Fields])) OR (advance[All Fields] AND care[All Fields] AND plan[All Fields]))) OR (((((((“Dementia”[Mesh] OR “Neurocognitive Disorders”[Mesh]) OR “Brain Injuries”[Mesh]) OR “Stroke”[Mesh]) OR “Learning Disorders”[Mesh]) OR “Autistic Disorder”[Mesh]) AND (((((“Decision-making”[Mesh] OR “Decision Support Techniques”[Mesh]) AND “Patient Participation”[Mesh]) OR “Cooperative Behavior’[Mesh]) OR “Physician-Patient Relations”[Mesh]) OR “Patient Education as Topic”[Mesh])) NOT Advance Directives (“Advance Directives”[Mesh] OR “Advance Care Planning”[Mesh]))) NOT Paediatrics (“child’[MeSH Terms] OR “child”[All Fields])) NOT (“Child”[Mesh] OR “Disabled Children”[Mesh]) |
| Alternate free-text search terms | (Cogniti*, Disorder*, Dementia*, Alzheimer*, Neurocogniti* Dis*, Brain Injur*, Autis*, Learning Dis*, Stroke) AND (Shared Decision-making, Deci* Mak*, Patient Participat*, Consumer Participat*, Cooperat*, Decision Support) NOT (Paed* Child*) NOT (Advance Directives, Advance* care planning, Advance* deci*) |
| Google Scholar | The search and screening strategy for Google Scholar was agreed by all three authors. Free-text search terms mirrored other databases. Results were filtered by relevance. The first 20 pages of results, title and abstract were screened (20 results per page). |
Characteristics of included studies
| Author(s) (year) | Purpose of study | Country | Methods | Quality score (%) | Setting | Participants | Sample size | Results or | |||
| PLWCI | CP | CW | Total | ||||||||
| Clarke | To influence SDM | Australia 3 | Qualitative interviews and observations | 75 | Extended care | PLWD and CW | 13 | 13 | 26 | Four positive and five negative carer characteristics were identified that impacted on decision-making. | |
| Fetherstonhaugh | To understand SDM | Qualitative interviews | 80 | Home | PLWD | 6 | 6 | Three pairs of conflicting attributes identified: (1) subtle support versus taking over; (2) hanging on versus letting go; and (3) being central versus being excluded | |||
| Milte | To understand SDM | Quantitative observed family meetings | 83 | Intermediate care | Older people, CPs and HCPs | 51 | 51 | 2 | 104 | Geriatricians’ performance in SDM was mixed; above baseline skill level in some areas and below in others. | |
| Tyrrell | To measure SDM | France 1 | Qualitative interviews | 83 | Home | PLWD and care partner | 21 | 21 | 42 | PLWD did not feel listened to and had limited freedom to participate in decision-making. | |
| Span | To facilitate SDM | Holland 1 | Qualitative interviews, focus groups, specialist consultation and workshops | 75 | Home | PLWD, CPs and HCPs | 84 | 18 topics of problems and eight topics addressing decision-making emerged. Only eight topics were identified by both PLWD and care partners. | |||
| Smebye | To understand SDM | Norway 1 | Mixed methods interviews and observations | 95 | Home and extended care | PLWD, CPs and HCPs | 10 | 10 | 10 | 30 | Care staff do not base mental competence on standardised tests; values and relationships as important as logic. |
| Ferm | To facilitate SDM | Sweden 2 | Mixed methods interviews | 95 | Home | PLWD | 5 | 5 | Talking Mats increased communication but effectiveness depended on conversation topic. | ||
| Kjellberg | To understand SDM | Qualitative interviews | 70 | Home, extended and day care | People living with LD | 23 | 23 | Of the nine theoretical combinations of levels of decision-making identified, only five emerged. | |||
| Bailey | To measure SDM | UK 5 | Quantitative electronic decision-making tasks and questionnaire | 79 | Day services | People living with LD | 24 | 24 | Decision-making task performances improved when using the visual aid designed. | ||
| Boyle | To measure SDM | Qualitative creative interaction, observation and interviews | 85 | Home | PLWD and CPs | 5 | 5 | 10 | Identified that agency related to SDM is demonstrated within six relevant themes. | ||
| Godwin | To facilitate SDM | Mixed methods consultation | 90 | Extended care | PLWD | 34 | 42 | 76 | Residents were able to demonstrate preferences relating to their environment and enjoyed the consultation process. | ||
| Murphy and Oliver | To facilitate SDM | Mixed methods researcher-facilitated discussion | 65 | Home | PLWD and CPs | 18 | 18 | 18 | Participants felt more involved in discussions when using Talking Mats although feeling of involvement was significantly higher for carers than for PLWD. | ||
| Samsi and Manthorpe | To understand SDM | Qualitative interviews | 90 | Home | PLWD and CPs | 15 | 15 | 30 | Three underlying principles identified if decision-making is negotiated and how dynamics changed: importance of autonomy, decision-specific approach and made on someone’s behalf described as ‘best interest’. | ||
| Feinberg and Whitlatch | To measure SDM | USA 6 | Quantitative interviews | 80 | Home | PLWD and CPs | 51 | 51 | 102 | Lower income and carer financial strain correlated with how well the PLWD felt their carer knew their care wishes (more financial strain=less understanding) | |
| Hirschman | To understand SDM | Interviews | 70 | Home and extended care | PLWD and CPs | 48 | 48 | 96 | Spousal carer— wife (90%) versus husband (21%). | ||
| Horton-Deutsch | To understand SDM | Mixed methods interviews | 85 | Home | PLWD and CPs | 20 | 20 | 40 | 75% PLWD had always involved HCP and/or spouse in decisions. | ||
| Menne | To measure SDM | Quantitative interviews | 100 | Home | PLWD and CPs | 217 | 217 | 434 | PLWD consistently considered themselves to have more involvement in decision-making than their care partners perceived them to be. | ||
| Menne and Whitlatch | To measure SDM | Quantitative secondary data analysis | 86 | Home | PLWD and CPs | 215 | 215 | 430 | Greater decision-making involvement associated with younger, female, educated, non-spousal CP, fewer months since diagnosis, fewer problems with ADLs, fewer depressive symptoms, and place more importance on autonomy/self-identity. | ||
| Whitlatch | To measure SDM | Mixed methods interviews | 100 | Home | PLWD and CPs | 111 | 111 | 222 | Values and preferences correlated with CP perceptions of PLWD quality of life and involvement in decision-making and with PLWD perception of own quality of life and involvement in decision-making. | ||
ADL, activities of daily living; CP, care partner; CW, care worker; HCP, healthcare professional; HD, Huntington’s disease; LD, learning disability; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; PLWCI, person living with cognitive impairment; PLWD, person living with dementia; SDM, shared decision-making.