| Literature DB >> 31382893 |
Amy Waller1,2, Rob Sanson-Fisher3,4, Balakrishnan R Kichu Nair5,6, Tiffany Evans7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite the perceived ethical, personal and health service benefits of advance care planning (ACP), the extent to which older and seriously ill Australian inpatients have considered future health decisions remains uncertain. This study aimed to determine in a sample of older and seriously ill inpatients, the proportion who had: 1) engaged in four advance care planning (ACP) activities; 2) not engaged in ACP activities but wanted to; and 3) reasons why they had not engaged.Entities:
Keywords: Acute care; Advance care planning; End-of-life
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31382893 PMCID: PMC6683455 DOI: 10.1186/s12877-019-1211-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Geriatr ISSN: 1471-2318 Impact factor: 3.921
Socio-demographic and clinical characteristics of the participant sample
| 55 79 years( | 80 years or over( | Total( | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sex | |||
| Male | 28 (43%) | 49 (42%) | 80 (43%) |
| Female | 37 (57%) | 67 (58%) | 106 (57%) |
| Australian born | |||
| Yes | 56 (86%) | 104 (90%) | 165 (89%) |
| No | 9 (14%) | 12 (10%) | 21 (11%) |
| Religion | |||
| Catholic | 20 (31%) | 20 (18%) | 40 (22%) |
| Anglican | 14 (22%) | 31 (27%) | 47 (26%) |
| Muslim | 4 (6.2%) | 10 (8.8%) | 14 (7.6%) |
| No religion | 16 (25%) | 28 (25%) | 45 (24%) |
| Other | 11 (17%) | 25 (22%) | 38 (21%) |
| Living arrangements | |||
| Home alone | 29 (45%) | 58 (50%) | 90 (49%) |
| Spouse/partner | 23 (35%) | 29 (25%) | 54 (29%) |
| Relative | 9 (14%) | 17 (15%) | 26 (14%) |
| Nursing home | 3 (4.6%) | 6 (5.2%) | 9 (4.9%) |
| Other | 1 (1.5%) | 5 (4.3%) | 6 (3.2%) |
| Reason for admission* | |||
| Fall | 13 (21%) | 36 (31%) | 49 (27%) |
| Pneumonia | 2 (3.2%) | 5 (4.4%) | 7 (3.9%) |
| Shortness of breath | 5 (7.9%) | 9 (8.0%) | 14 (7.7%) |
| Fracture | 0 | 4 (3.5%) | 4 (2.2%) |
| Infection | 7 (11%) | 8 (7.1%) | 15 (8.8%) |
| Other | 47 (72%) | 68 (60%) | 115 (64%) |
| Medical conditions* | |||
| Cancer | 9 (14%) | 15 (14%) | 25 (14%) |
| COPD | 6 (9.4%) | 10 (9.0%) | 17 (9.4%) |
| Heart failure | 13 (20%) | 21 (19%) | 35 (19%) |
| Renal disease | 25 (39%) | 10 (9.0%) | 35 (19%) |
| Diabetes | 19 (30%) | 11 (9.6%) | 31 (17%) |
| Other | 40 (63%) | 80 (72%) | 123 (69%) |
*Multiple response items, column does not add to 100%. Column frequencies may not sum to 186 due to missing data
Fig. 1The total number of advance care planning activities engaged in by participants
Prevalence of engagement in advance care planning activities in whole sample and by sub-group
| Total ( | 55–79 years ( | 80+ years ( | p | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Discussed preferred end of life care with doctor | 0.6396 | |||
| Yes | 48 (27%) | 14 (23%) | 33 (29%) | |
| Not engaged but wanted to | 57 (32%) | 21 (34%) | 35 (31%) | |
| Not engaged and did not want to | 73 (41%) | 27 (44%) | 45 (40%) | |
| Discussed preferred end of life care with support person | 0.6058 | |||
| Yes | 90 (51%) | 28 (45%) | 59 (53%) | |
| Not engaged but wanted to | 29 (16%) | 12 (19%) | 17 (15%) | |
| Not engaged and did not want to | 58 (33%) | 22 (36%) | 36 (32%) | |
| Written down wishes for end of life care |
| |||
| Yes | 50 (27%) | 20 (31%) | 28 (24%) | |
| Not engaged but wanted to | 56 (31%) | 27 (42%) | 28 (24%) | |
| Not engaged and did not want to | 77 (42%) | 17 (27%) | 59 (51%) | |
| Appointed a medical substitute-decision maker | 0.1904 | |||
| Yes | 94 (52%) | 31 (48%) | 60 (53%) | |
| Not engaged but wanted to | 47 (26%) | 22 (34%) | 25 (22%) | |
| Not engaged and did not want to | 41 (23%) | 12 (19%) | 29 (25%) | |
significant p-value is in bold and italics