| Literature DB >> 33184079 |
Angela Jjm Keijzer-van Laarhoven1,2,3,4, Dorothea P Touwen2, Bram Tilburgs3, Madelon van Tilborg-den Boeft3,5, Claudia Pees6, Wilco P Achterberg3, Jenny T van der Steen7.
Abstract
IMPORTANCE ANDEntities:
Keywords: geriatric medicine; medical ethics; palliative care; primary care
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33184079 PMCID: PMC7662455 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2020-038528
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Search strategy and inclusion criteria
| Search strategy | ||
| PubMed | Web of science | PsycINFO |
| (“dementia”(mesh] OR neurocognit*(tiab] OR “cognitive”(tiab] OR “cognition”(tiab] OR “dementia”(tiab] OR “dementias”(tiab] OR “Alzheimer”(tiab] OR “Alzheimer’s”(tiab] OR “amnesia”(tiab] OR “amnesias”(tiab] OR “amnesic”(tiab)) AND (“Advance Care Planning”(Mesh] OR Advance Care Plan*(tiab)) | (“dementia*” OR neurocognit* OR “cognitive” OR “cognition” OR “neurocognitive” OR “Alzheimer*” OR “amnesia*” OR “amnesic”) AND “Advance Care Plan*” | (DE “Dementia” OR DE “Alzheimer’s Disease” OR neurocognit* OR TI “dementia*” OR TI “Alzheimer*” OR TI “cognitive” OR TI “cognition” OR TI “neurocognitive” OR “amnesia*” OR TI “amnesic” OR AB “dementia*” OR AB “Alzheimer*” OR AB “cognitive” OR AB “cognition” OR AB “neurocognitive” OR “amnesia*” OR AB “amnesic”) AND (DE “Advance Directives” OR TI “Advance Care Plan*” OR AB “Advance Care Plan*") |
| Inclusion and exclusion criteria | ||
| | ||
| (1) Reporting on empirical data | ||
| (2) A population or an identifiable subgroup diagnosed with dementia | ||
| (3) ACP in the context of a long-standing relationship between the physician, the patient with dementia and his/her relatives | ||
| (4) Care provided in long-term care (LTC) and primary care settings | ||
| (5) Barriers to and facilitators of ACP on the part of the physician and described from various perspectives | ||
| (6) Studies emphasising moral considerations as a barrier or facilitator for the physician | ||
| | ||
| (1) Studies about consent for research participation | ||
| (2) ACP limited to drawing up an advance directive that is not brought to the attention of | ||
| (3) Theoretical, legal and ethical issues that are not barriers to or facilitators of ACP for the | ||
| (4) Studies that exclusively consider advance decision making on euthanasia | ||
ACP, advance care planning.
Figure 1Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses flow diagram. ACP, advance care planning.
Description of included systematic reviews
| Author and year of publication | Type of systematic review | Study goal | Study design | Scope of the review | No of articles and setting | Themes relevant to moral considerations/perspective | AMSTAR-2 |
| Beck | Narrative review | Overview of evidence on healthcare professional’s perspectives on ACP for people with dementia | Narrative literature review of qualitative and quantitative studies | 4 databases searched for articles, published between 2002 and 2014 | 14 studies included. | Healthcare professional’s ethical and moral concerns regarding ACP. | Critically low quality review |
| Birchley | Scoping review | To understand the challenges in securing good end-of-life care | Scoping review of qualitative and mixed-methods studies | 6 databases searched for articles, published between | 49 studies included. | Process of decision making at the EOL, minimal medical intervention and a natural good death, difficulties in progressing the approach of ACP. Perspectives: frail older people and people with dementia | _ |
| Barker | Scoping review | To explore evidence on decisional support needs of informal carers of people with end-stage dementia | Scoping review of literature reviews and primary studies. Quantitative, qualitative and mixed-methods studies | 6 databases searched for articles published between 2000 and 2016 | 40 articles included. Healthcare settings and person’s own home | Besides living well with dementia there is a need to plan for a good death. | _ |
| Brooke and Kirk | Literature review of empirical research | Barriers and facilitators with impact on healthcare professional’s engagement with ACP for people living with dementia and their families | Literature review of qualitative and quantitative studies | 3 databases searched for articles published between 2013 and 2014 | 4 studies included. | Lack of ACP knowledge, understanding the right time and reluctance/avoidance of patients/relatives. Perspective: healthcare professionals | Critically low quality review |
| Jones | Scoping review | Synthesise the research evidence on decision-making concerning EOL care for people with dementia | Scoping review of heterogeneous types of studies | 6 databases searched for articles published between 1945 and 2015 | 25 studies included. | Decision making and who is involved, relevant systemic factors within agencies, and the quality of death vs withdrawal of treatment. Perspectives: person with dementia, healthcare professional and relative | _ |
| Lord | Systematic review | Review of barriers and facilitators of family carers of people with dementia and interventions for proxy decision making | Literature review of qualitative and quantitative studies | 1 database searched without restrictions to date of publication up to 1 February 2014 | 30 papers included. | Benefit of decision-making support provided by professionals to family caregivers. Development of decision aids. Perspective: informal caregivers: family and friends | Critically low quality review |
| Ryan | Systematic review, qualitative synthesis | Addressing the ACP experience of people with dementia, family caregivers and professionals | Literature review of qualitative studies | 3 databases searched for articles published between 2007 and 2017 | 5 studies included. | Scope of future planning, challenges to ACP, postponing ACP, confidence and making ACP happen. | Critically low quality review |
| Lai | Integrative review | Identify key factors for engagement in decision-making process | Review of qualitative, quantitative and mixed-methods studies | 5 databases searched for articles published from 2012 to April 2018 | 20 articles included. | Six key factors identified: understanding dementia and decision making for the future, communication skills, timing and initiating, quality of the relationship, orientation on the future. Perspective: patients, family and physicians | Critically low quality review |
| van der Steen | Systematic review | Identify factors associated with initiation of ACP regarding issues in dementia | Literature review of qualitative and quantitative studies | 5 databases searched for articles published up to 10 January 2013 | 33 studies included. | A variety of factors related to initiating ACP on part of family, professional caregivers and healthcare system. Perspectives: patients, family, professional caregivers | Critically low quality review |
| Tilburgs | Systematic integrative review | Determine the barriers and facilitators faced by GPs related to ACP with people with dementia and family carers | Literature review of qualitative, quantitative and one mixed-methods study | 5 databases searched for articles published between January 1995 and December 2016 | 16 studies included. | Four themes: timely initiation, stakeholder engagement, aspects of ACP conversation and prerequisites for ACP. Perspective: GP, people with dementia, family carers | Critically low quality review |
| Dening et al | Narrative review | Examine facilitators and inhibitors to ACP in people with dementia and themes that emerge from the literature | Literature review of quantitative, qualitative and mixed-methods studies | 6 databases searched for articles published between 1950 and 2010 | 17 studies included. | Several themes revealing both barriers and facilitators for ACP. | Critically low quality review |
ACP, advance care planning; LTC, long-term care; NH, nursing home; EOL, end of life; GP, general practitioner.
Description of included primary studies reporting empirical research
| Author, year of publication and country | Study goal | Study design: qualitative, quantitative or mixed-method | Participants and setting | Themes and findings: moral considerations as barriers to and facilitators of ACP. perspective | MMAT |
| Dempsey | Highlight the benefits and challenges of ACP for individuals with dementia | Qualitative descriptive design | General practice. | Ethical and legal dilemmas for implementation ACP Perspective: professionals, patients, loved ones | 40 |
| Saini | Examine practices relating to EOL discussions with family members of people with advanced dementia residing in NH and to explore strategies for improving practice | Ethnographic study using framework approach: thematic analysis of fieldwork notes and observations, and data from in-depth interviews | NH. | EOL discussions as an ongoing rather than a one-off task-driven conversation Perspective: family members, GPs, nursing home staff end external physicians | 60 |
| De Vleminck | Identify barriers to initiate ACP and gain insight into any difference in barriers between trajectories of patients with cancer, heart failure and dementia | Qualitative design, 5 focus groups, discussion analysed using the method of constant comparative analysis | Primary care. | Barriers to ACP relating to the GP, patient and family and the healthcare system. | 80 |
| Booij | Explore the role of the physician regarding talking about the EOL wishes. | Qualitative study, semi structured interviews | Primary care and elderly care physicians, n=15 | Reasons for the physician to discuss EOL wishes from a legal, professional and moral point of view. | 100 |
| Beck | Examine NH managers’ knowledge, attitudes, beliefs and current practice regarding ACP | Cross-sectional postal survey, quantitative study | NH managers, n=116 | Negative connotations regarding ACP among nurses. Role NH manager to actively engage and ensure facilitation of the process. Perspective: NH managers | 20 |
| Stewart | Explore views on advance care planning in nursing homes | Individual semistructured interviews | NH. | Benefits of, and barriers to ACP. Perspective: staff, care assistants, nurses, families and friends of residents | 60 |
| Brazil | GP’s perception of ACP for patients living with dementia | Cross-sectional survey, using purposive, cluster sampling of GPs with registered dementia patients. Quantitative design | General practice. | Communication, ACP and decision making: optimal timing, initiated by the physician, importance of relationship, acceptance prognoses and limitations of life-sustaining therapy as barriers. | 80 |
| Cheong | Explore the perspectives of patients with early cognitive impairment regarding ACP | Mixed-methods study | Primary care. Patients diagnosed with early cognitive impairment, n=93 | Patients decline ACP because of personal values, coping behaviours and sociocultural norms. | 100 |
| Livingston | Improve EOL care for people with dementia in a nursing home by increasing documentation and implementation of advanced wishes | Mixed-methods study. Non-randomised study: comparing advance documentation and implementation and themes from after-death interviews, pre and postintervention | NH for people with dementia, providing care recognising Jewish traditions, beliefs and cultures. | Increase in family satisfaction with reduction in hospital deaths. Staff members more confident about EOL planning and implementation wishes. | 60 |
| Livingston | Examine barriers and facilitators to care home staff delivering improved EOL care for people with dementia | Individual qualitative interviews | NH where staff and residents’ ethnicity differed. | Barriers such as concern to upset, being blamed, inability to communicate | 60 |
| Robinson et al | Explore professionals’ experiences on implementation of advance care planning in dementia and palliative care | Qualitative study, focus groups and individual interviews | Palliative care, primary care and dementia care services. | Uncertainty about the value and usefulness of ACP, the definition, components and legal status of ACP and the practicalities of implementation. Perspective: professionals | 80 |
| Dickinson et al | To investigate patients’ and family caregivers’ views on planning their future generally and ACP specifically | Qualitative study using semi-structured interviews | Local older people services | Participants’ barriers to undertake ACP: knowledge and awareness, right time, informal plans, future care and lack of support. Perspective: patients and family caregivers | 60 |
| Palan Lopez | Examine how decisions to transfer NH residents with advanced dementia are made | Qualitative descriptive method and semistructured, open-ended interviews | NH. | ACP in the process of decision making in case of an acute event to ensure that goals of care are maintained. | 60 |
ACP, advance care planning; EOL, end of life; GP, general practitioner; MMAT, Mixed-Methods Appraisal Tool; NH, nursing home.
Themes, categories and codes concerning moral barriers and facilitators physicians encounter in ACP
| Themes | Categories | Facilitator codes for ACP | Barrier codes for ACP |
| 1. Beneficence and non-maleficence | Decision making at the EOL based on the intention to provide good care | Aiming at decision making based on the patient’s best interests | Experiencing EOL decision making as difficult in case of conflicting interests |
| Diminishing emotional burden to patient | Hesitating to discuss death because of fear to induce anxiety or emotional harm | ||
| Aiming to provide emotional support to family | |||
| Maintain hope for the future despite a future with inevitable decline | Providing hope for the future | Fearing to destroy patient’s sense of hope for the future by conducting ACP | |
| Physician’s professional attitude towards talking about death and dying: intention and practice | Witnessing illness or death facilitates ACP | Experiencing discomfort in discussing death or EOL | |
| Physician’s personal attitude towards talking about death and dying | Perceiving the physician as a fellow human being, not just a professional | Avoiding the conversation due to personal perspectives on death | |
| 2. Respecting dignity | Good death | Ensuring that patients with dementia have the same opportunities for EOL planning | Disregarding decisions agreed on due to families’ poor understanding of how death happens, causing gaps between expectations and reality |
| Physician’s personal perspective on a good death | Opposite views among physicians on a good death | ||
| Respect cultural, spiritual and religious beliefs | Aiming to respect religious, cultural and life issues | Family and professional caregivers holding different religious, spiritual and cultural beliefs regarding practicing ACP | |
| Physician as a person: cultural, spiritual and religious beliefs | Impact of physician’s personal religious beliefs on decision making | Experiencing no concordance with physician’s personal religious beliefs | |
| Respect autonomy, wishes and preferences | Viewing ACP as a way of maintaining person’s individual identity | Experiencing conflicts between personal and relational integrity, concerning patient’s autonomy | |
| ACP in regard to future communication inability and lack of decision making capacity | Having moral and ethical concerns related to the effects of declining capacity of person with dementia | ||
| Aiming to respect patient’s healthcare or EOL wishes. | Fearing substitute judgement being not truly reflective of wishes of person with dementia | ||
| 3. Taking responsibility and ownership | Obligation | Talking about the subject as a legal, professional and moral obligation | Fearing litigation or fear of experiencing moral dilemmas regarding ACP |
| Responsibility and ownership | Feeling responsible for initiating the discussion given future lack of capacity/ ability of patients to take part in discussion | Feeling that initiating the discussion is inappropriate when patients don’t initiate themselves. | |
| Feeling a professional responsibility for decision making based on patient’s needs | Being reluctant to assume responsibility for ACP and decision making | ||
| Family caregiver requesting physician to bear responsibility for decision making | Being uncertain about who is responsible for discussing and decision making | ||
| 4. Relationship | Long-term relationship | Building conditions to maintain long-term relationships | Not having a long-standing relation with family |
| Trust and confidence | Having a good relationship with the person with dementia | ||
| Having a good relationship between physician and family generates confidence | Not having a close relationship with staff, causing reluctance of family to discuss or to be involved in decision making | ||
| 5. Courage | Decision making in conflict and crisis | Aiming to reduce EOL crisis decision making | Experiencing dealing with conflicts about care as a challenge |
| Legal aspects | Worrying about being blamed or litigation |
ACP, advance care planning; EOL, end of life.