| Literature DB >> 29924837 |
Bram Tilburgs1, Myrra Vernooij-Dassen1, Raymond Koopmans2,3,4, Hans van Gennip5, Yvonne Engels6, Marieke Perry2,3,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Due to the disease's progressive nature, advance care planning (ACP) is recommended for people with early stage dementia. General practitioners (GPs) should initiate ACP because of their longstanding relationships with their patients and their early involvement with the disease, however ACP is seldom applied. AIM: To determine the barriers and facilitators faced by GPs related to ACP with people with dementia. DATA SOURCES: We systematically searched the relevant databases for papers published between January 1995 and December 2016, using the terms: primary healthcare, GP, dementia, and ACP. We conducted a systematic integrative review following Whittemore and Knafl's method. Papers containing empirical data about GP barriers and/or facilitators regarding ACP for people with dementia were included. We evaluated quality using the Mixed-Method-Appraisal-Tool and analyzed data using qualitative content analysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29924837 PMCID: PMC6010277 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0198535
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Search strategies for Medline, Psychinfo, CINAHL.
| Medline | Psychinfo | CINAHL |
|---|---|---|
| (exp Primary Health Care/ OR exp General Practitioners/ OR exp Community Health Services/ OR ((primary adj3 care) OR (health adj3 care adj3 primary) OR (primary adj3 health adj3 care)).ti,kw,ab. OR (general adj3 practitioner?).ti,kw,ab. OR (community adj3 health adj services).ti,kw,ab. OR (family adj3 medicine).ti,kw,ab. OR exp Physicians, Family/ OR (physician? adj3 family).ab,kw,ti. OR (family adj 3 physician?).ab,ti,kw. OR (family adj3 doctor?).ab,kw,ti. OR (primary adj3 physician?).ti,ab,kw. OR (community adj3 health adj3 care).ti,ab,kw.) AND (exp Advance Care Planning/ OR exp Advance Directives/ OR (advance adj3 care adj3 planning).ti,kw,ab. OR ACP.ti,kw,ab. OR (advance adj3 medical adj3 plan?).ti,kw,ab. OR (advance adj3 health adj3 care adj3 plan?).ti,kw,ab. OR (advance adj3 healthcare adj3 plan?).ti,kw,ab. OR (advance adj3 health-care adj3 plan?).ti,kw,ab. OR (advance adj3 directive?).ti,kw,ab. OR (advance adj3 medical adj3 directive?).ti,kw,ab. OR (end adj3 life adj3 communicat*).ti,kw,ab. OR (end-of-life adj3 communicat*).ti,ab,kw. OR (life adj3 sustaining adj3 treat* adj3 preference?).ti,kw,ab. OR (life-sustaining adj3 treatment adj3 preference?).ti,kw,ab. OR (end adj3 life adj3 decision adj3 making).ti,kw,ab. OR (end-of-life adj3 decision adj3 making).ti,kw,ab. OR (living adj3 will?).ti,kw,ab. OR exp patient participation/ OR(patient adj3 participation).ti,kw,ab. OR (patient adj3 involvement).ti,kw,ab. OR (advance adj3 decision adj3 making).ti,kw,ab. OR (advance adj3 decision?).ti,kw,ab. OR (shared adj3 decision adj3 making).ti,kw,ab. OR exp Life support Care/ OR (life adj3 suppORt adj3 care).ti,kw,ab. OR (end adj3 life adj3 decision?).ti,ab,kw.) AND (exp Dementia/ OR (alzheimer* adj3 diseas*).ti,kw,ab. OR dement*.ti,kw,ab.) | (exp Primary Health Care/ OR exp General Practitioners/ OR ((primary adj3 care) or (health adj3 care adj3 primary) or (primary adj3 health adj3 care)).ti,id,ab. OR (general adj3 practitioner?).ti,id,ab OR (community adj3 health adj services).ti,id,ab OR (family adj3 medicine).ti,id,ab. OR exp Family Physicians/ OR (family adj3 physician?).ti,ab,id. OR (community adj health adj care).ti,id,ab. OR (family adj3 doctor?).ti,ab,id. OR (primary adj3 physician?).ab,ti,id.) AND (exp Advance Directives/ OR (advance adj3 care adj3 planning).ti,id,ab. OR ACP.ti,id,ab. OR (advance adj3 medical adj3 plan?).ti,id,ab. OR (advance adj3 health adj3 care adj3 plan?).ti,id,ab. OR (advance adj3 healthcare adj3 plan?).ti,id,ab. OR (advance adj3 health-care adj3 plan?).ti,id,ab. OR (advance adj3 directive?).ti,id,ab. OR (advance adj3 medical adj3 directive?).ti,id,ab. OR (end adj3 life adj3 communicat*).ti,id,ab. OR (end-of-life adj3 communicat*).ti,ab,id. OR (life adj3 sustaining adj3 treat* adj3 preference?).ti,id,ab OR (life-sustaining adj3 treatment adj3 preference?).ti,id,ab OR (end adj3 life adj3 decision adj3 making).ti,id,ab. OR (end-of-life adj3 decision adj3 making).ti,id,ab. OR (living adj3 will?).ti,id,ab. OR exp Client Participation/ OR (client adj3 participation).ti,id,ab. OR (patient adj3 participation).ti,id,ab. OR (client adj3 involvement).ti,id,ab. OR (patient adj3 involvement).ti,id,ab. OR (advance adj3 decision adj3 making).ti,id,ab. OR (advance adj3 decision?).ti,id,ab. OR (shared adj3 decision adj3 making).ti,id,ab. OR exp Palliative Care/ OR (palliative adj3 care).ti,id,ab. OR exp Life Sustaining Treatment/ OR (life adj3 sustaining adj3 treat*).ti,id,ab.) AND (exp Dementia/ OR (alzheimer* adj3 diseas*).ti,id,ab. OR dement*.ti,id,ab. OR exp Alzheimer’s Disease/) | (TI primary physician OR AB primary physician OR TI community health OR AB community health OR (MH "Community Health Services+") OR TI family doctor OR AB family doctor OR TI family medicine OR AB family medicine OR TI primary health care OR AB primary health care OR TI primary healthcare OR AB primary healthcare OR (MH "Primary Health Care") OR TI general practitioner OR AB general practitioner OR (MH "Physicians, Family") OR TI family physician OR AB family physician) AND ((MH "Dementia+") OR ((TI dementia) OR (AB dementia)) OR ((TI alzheimer’s disease) OR (AB alzheimer’s disease))) AND (TI end of life decisions OR AB end of life decisions OR TI life sustaining treatment preferences OR AB life sustaining treatment preferences OR TI palliative care OR AB palliative care OR (MH "Palliative Care") OR TI end of life decision making OR AB end of life decision making OR TI shared decision making OR AB shared decision making OR TI advance decision OR AB advance decision OR TI patient involvement OR AB patient involvement OR TI patient participation OR AB patient participation OR TI living will OR AB living will OR TI end of life decisions OR AB end of life decisions OR TI life sustaining treatment OR AB life sustaining treatment OR TI end of life communication OR AB end of life communication OR (MH "Decision Making, Patient+") OR (MH "Decision Making, Family") OR TI advance medical directives OR AB advance medical directives OR TI advance health directive OR AB advance health directive OR (MH "Advance Care Planning") OR ((TI advance care planning) OR (AB advance care planning)) OR (MH "Advance Directives+") OR ((TI advance directives) OR (AB advance directives))) |
Fig 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-analyses (PRISMA) flow diagram.
Themes, categories and codes of the included qualitative articles.
| Themes | Categories | Codes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Facilitators | Barriers | ||
| A timely start facilitates ACP [ | The right timing for ACP is difficult to determine[ | ||
| The dementia diagnosis stimulates patients to think about the future[ | The patients denial/resistance of the dementia diagnosis hinders ACP[ | ||
| Because of the cognitive decline, when ACP starts early more participation is possible[ | The denial of future problems hinders ACP [ | ||
| ACP gives patients time to think about the future[ | |||
| High impact events can prompt ACP[ | ACP is not initiated because it might cause stress or fear with the patient[ | ||
| The GP should take the initiative for ACP[ | It is not always clear who should take the initiative for ACP[ | ||
| ACP stimulates discussions about the future[ | |||
| A good relationship between the patient/family and the GP facilitates ACP[ | Carers find that the difficult relationship between them and the patients hinders ACP[ | ||
| If the patient is no longer capable of making decisions, others will[ | The unawareness of the dementia diagnosis hinders ACP [ | ||
| It is preferred to carry out ACP with all stakeholders[ | The stakeholders assessment of the patients decisional capacity is limited in consisted and hinders ACP[ | ||
| Carers find taking the responsibility for ACP decisions difficult [ | |||
| Providing realistic information increases empowerment[ | Patients and carers are insufficiently informed about the diagnosis, disease trajectory, care and treatment options[ | ||
| Patients and carers lack knowledge about the purpose of ACP or are unaware of the existence [ | |||
| GPs provide information selectively because they feel patient/carers cannot cope[ | |||
| The GP must ask for the patients needs directly[ | The limitations of healthcare can be a barrier for ACP[ | ||
| The costs of legal matters are high and limit ACP[ | |||
| The patients pursuit for a normal level of function influences ACP decision making [ | |||
| Burdensome interventions take place when preferences are unknown[ | |||
| The carers previous experiences with other dementia patients influences ACP[ | |||
| Financial matters and the power of attorney must be a topic in ACP[ | |||
| Stakeholders prefer informal ACP discussions [ | |||
| The preservation of QOL influences ACP decisions [ | |||
| The use of decision aids can support ACP decision making[ | |||
| Documenting ACP makes patient wishes available to all stakeholders[ | ACP is not documented because future wishes/circumstances might change[ | ||
| Trough ACP wishes are known by all stakeholders[ | ACP decisions are not documented because of feelings of guilt/disloyalty[ | ||
| GP’s knowledge about the diagnosis, disease trajectory, care and treatment options facilitate ACP[ | GP’s lack knowledge about the legal status of ACP[ | ||
| Training the GP is essential for ACP [ | |||
| Good communication skills of the GP facilitate ACP [ | |||
| ACP provides self protection, feelings of relief and takes away concerns about the future [ | Discussing the future can be dispiriting[ | ||
| ACP must be a cyclical process so decisions are regularly reviewed[ | There are doubts about the added value of ACP [ | ||
| Previous experiences facilitate ACP [ | The patients personality can hinder ACP[ | ||
| ACP is not possible because patients preferences might change[ | |||
| ACP is difficult because the future is unpredictable [ | |||
| Doubts if the decisions made in ACP are feasible [ | |||
| Patients/carers are not oriented on the future[ | |||
| Stakeholders have doubts about the added value of ACP[ | |||
| A negative attitude towards ACP is a barrier for having these discussions[ | |||
| Some stakeholders feel that ACP is outside their professional remit[ | |||
| ACP must be a cyclical process so decisions are regularly reviewed [ | |||
P: stated by the patient; C: stated by the carer; HP: stated by the GP/healthcare professional
Themes, categories and codes of the quantitative articles.
| Themes | categories | Codes | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Facilitators | Barriers | ||
| Because of the cognitive decline, when ACP starts early more participation is possible[ | The right timing of ACP is difficult to determine [ | ||
| A timely start facilitates ACP[ | PWD’s denial/resistance of the dementia diagnosis hinders ACP[ | ||
| The GP should take the initiative for ACP[ | ACP is not initiated because it might cause stress or fear with PWD [ | ||
| It is preferred to carry out ACP with all stakeholders[ | PWD are only limitary involved in ACP [ | ||
| PWD’s participation is possible in all phases of dementia[ | The assessment of the PWD’s decisional capacity is limited, inconsistent and hinders ACP[ | ||
| PWD are able to participate about values longer[ | |||
| PWD should be informed about the diagnosis, disease trajectory, care and treatment options [ | |||
| PWD’s preferences for ACP depend on the domain of the topic discussed[ | |||
| An advance directive is important in dementia [ | |||
| A positive attitude towards ACP is a facilitator for having these discussions[ | |||
P: stated by the patient; C: stated by the carer; HP: stated by the GP/healthcare professional
Description of the selected qualitative studies.
| Author | Design | Participants and settings | Main findings | Themes | MMAT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lawrence et al. United Kingdom, 2011 | A qualitative design using in-depth interviews with healthcare professionals and family carers | 27 bereaved FCs and 23 healthcare professionals from the community, care homes, general hospitals and continuing care units | The timing was considered crucial. ACP should not start too soon because this would cause distress and not to late because of the cognitive decline. PWD and FCs felt insufficiently informed about dementia and ACP. No one felt the responsibility to start ACP. | Timely initiation of ACP, Important aspects of the ACP conversation Prerequisites of ACP | 50% of the criteria met |
| De Vleminck et al. Belgium, 2014 | A qualitative exploratory design using focus group interviews | 36 GPs from local peer-review groups | The lack of familiarity with the terminal phase of dementia, the lack of key moments to initiate ACP, the patients lack of awareness of their diagnosis and prognosis and the fact that patients do not initiate ACP themselves are barriers to conducting ACP. Familiarity with palliative care was considered a facilitator | Timely initiation of ACP Stakeholder engagement, Important aspects of the ACP conversation, Prerequisites of ACP | 75% of the criteria met |
| Livingston et al. United Kingdom, 2010 | A qualitative design using focus group and individual in-depth interviews | 43 FCs for the focus group interviews. 46 family carers for the individual interviews. All respondents are recruited from 4 general practices, 3 memory clinics and 5 community clinics | Carers want support from other family members and healthcare professionals when making decisions. They want to receive information well timed. Relationships between stakeholders influence ACP. Remaining QoL is important when making ACP decisions | Timely initiation of ACP, Stakeholder engagement, Important aspects of the ACP conversation, Prerequisites of ACP | 75% of the criteria met |
| Stirling et al. Australia, 2012 | A qualitative design using semi-structured, Individual, in-depth interviews and focus group interviews | 13 carers of PWD. 4 community nurses, 4 community support workers and 4 counsellors from memory clinics. | Providing realistic information about dementia increases empowerment and facilitates ACP. Decision aids can support ACP. Healthcare professionals provide information selectively because they think PWD and FCs cannot cope with upsetting realities. | Important aspects of the ACP conversations | 25% of the criteria met |
| Dening et al. United Kingdom, 2013 | A qualitative design using interviews | 6 PWD, 5 FCs, and 5 dyads of people with dementia and their carers from A memory service | ACP decisions have to be taken with all stakeholders. Wishes of people with dementia and their carers might differ. Information, independence and control are main themes in dementia care. | Stakeholder engagement, Important aspects of the ACP conversation, Prerequisites of ACP | 50% of the criteria met |
| Poppe et al. United Kingdom, 2013 | A qualitative design using semi-structured, in-depth, interviews | 12 PWD living at home, 8 FCs and 6 staff members from memory clinics. | PWD and FCs lack knowledge about dementia and ACP. ACP should be initiated by a well informed professional soon after the diagnosis. The outcome of ACP should be well documented and available for all health service providers. A decision aid can support ACP | Timely initiation of ACP, Stakeholder engagement, Important aspects of the ACP conversation, Prerequisites of ACP | 50% of the criteria met |
| Robinson et al. United Kingdom, 2013 | A qualitative design using focus group and individual interviews | 5 palliative care specialists, 10 general practitioners, 17 community nurses, 10 old-age psychiatrists, 22 mental health nurses, 6 social workers, 15 members of the ambulance services, 3 solicitors and 7 members of the voluntary sector | For the implementation of ACP concerns where expressed about the timing and initiation, the possibility to deliver the patients choice, the financial and legal aspects and the different forms of documentation. | Timely initiation of ACP, Stakeholder engagement, Important aspects of the ACP conversation, Prerequisites of ACP | 50% of the criteria met |
| Dickinson et al. United Kingdom, 2013 | A qualitative design using in-depth interviews | 17 PWD and 29 FCs from local older peoples services | People with dementia undertake action for practical, financial and personal planning but have difficulties making plans for future healthcare. Barriers are: lack of awareness and knowledge of ACP, the right timing and constraints about choice of future care options | Timely initiation of ACP, Stakeholder engagement, Important aspects of the ACP conversation, Prerequisites of ACP | 75% of the criteria met |
| Horton-Deutch et al. United States, 2007 | A qualitative design using semi structured interviews | 31 PWD and their FCs from a outpatient Alzheimer clinic | PWD want to make decisions with important others. PWD’s pursuit of a normal level of function influences their decision making. The decisions made are not stable over time and FCs make different decisions compared to care receivers. | Stakeholder engagement, Important aspects of the ACP conversation | 50% of the criteria met |
| Hirschmann et al. United States, 2008 | A qualitative design, using semi-structured in-depth interviews | 30 PWD and their FCs. 8 of these PWD lived at home, 3 used an assisted living facility and 19 lived in a long term facility | ACP discussions should be proactive and start early. Healthcare professionals should be educated to avoid a late start. Lawyers, financial workers can play a role in decision making. | Timely initiation of ACP, Engagement of all stakeholders. Important aspects of the ACP conversation, Prerequisites of ACP | 50% of the criteria met |
ACP: advance care planning; PWD: people with dementia; FC: family carer
* Mixed Method Appraisal Tool
Description of the selected quantitative studies.
| Author | Design | Participants and settings | Main Findings | Themes | MMAT |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Hamann et al. Germany, 2011 | A cross sectional survey | 100 PWD, 99 FCs and their referring 93 physicians | MMSE correlates negatively with the understanding ( | Timely initiation of ACP, Stakeholder engagement, Important aspects of the ACP conversation | 50% of the criteria met |
| Tay et al. Singapore, 2015 | A cross sectional design. A set of standard (clinical) evaluations were administered face to face | 98 PWD from a tertiary hospital in Singapore | PWD scored higher on the FAB (t = -3.65, P < .0001) when they make ACP plans or intended to do so. PWD who do not feel the urge to make future plans were less willing to engage in ACP than PWD who used more active coping strategies (t = 2.83, p = .006). PWD who intended or already made future plans had less negative attitudes towards ACP ( | Timely initiation of ACP, Stakeholder engagement, Prerequisites of ACP | 50% of the criteria met |
| van der Steen et al. the Netherlands, 2016 | A cross sectional survey | 133 GPs from Northern Ireland and 188 elderly care physicians from the Netherlands | 39.8% of the GPs agreed that ACP should start at diagnosis and 45.9% strongly or moderately disagreed | Timely initiation of ACP | 75% of the criteria met |
| Brazil et al. United Kingdom, 2015 | A cross sectional survey | 133 GPs from Northern Ireland | GPs moderately (45.5%) or strongly (23.5%) agree that early discussions facilitated decision making. 82.7% of the GPs agree that the GP should take the initiative for ACP. 56.4% of the GPs fear that taking the initiative increases PWD’s and the family’s anxiety. 96.3% of the GPs find including the patient and family caregiver in ACP as partners has to be a clinical practice goal.79% of the GPs agreed that PWD and their families should be informed about commonly occurring health problems in dementia. 60% of the GPs disagreed that informing PWD and their families about dementia not needed because families will witness the cognitive decline later which is sufficient | Timely initiation of ACP, Stakeholders engagement. Important aspects of the ACP conversation | 50% of the criteria met |
| Karlawish et al. United States, 2005 | A cross sectional design using semi-structured interviews, questionnaires and clinical evaluations | 48 PWD and 102 FCs from a Alzheimer’s Disease Centre | PWD were labelled by psychiatrists as non-competent for medical decision making (Sn < 52%; Sp > 79%) when MMSE scores were < 19 | Timely initiation of ACP | 75% of the criteria met |
| Karel et al. United States, 2010 | A mixed method study using cognitive, psychiatric capacity assessments alongside semi-structured, individual, interviews | 20 PWD, 20 patients with schizophrenia and 19 cognitively healthy elderly from an outpatients clinic | PWD prefer collaborative decision making with their doctor and family. When they rate their collaboration preferences on a scale from 1 to 4, PWD prefer joined decision making with their doctor (mean 2.02) and their family (mean 1.55). For PWD it is more easy to justify their choices in terms of valued activities and relationships | Stakeholder engagement | 50% of the criteria met |
* Mixed Method Appraisal Tool
ACP: advance care planning; PWD: people with dementia; FC: family carer