| Literature DB >> 34488509 |
Diah Martina1,2,3,4, Olaf P Geerse5, Cheng-Pei Lin6,7, Martina S Kristanti8, Wichor M Bramer9, Masanori Mori10, Ida J Korfage2, Agnes van der Heide2, Judith Ac Rietjens2, Carin Cd van der Rijt1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Asian healthcare professionals hold that patients' families play an essential role in advance care planning. AIM: To systematically synthesize evidence regarding Asian patients' perspectives on advance care planning and their underlying motives.Entities:
Keywords: Asian continental ancestry group; attitude; critical illness; mixed design; patient preference; systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34488509 PMCID: PMC8637390 DOI: 10.1177/02692163211042530
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Palliat Med ISSN: 0269-2163 Impact factor: 4.762
Figure 1.Multi-step synthesis and analysis.
ACP: advance care planning.
Figure 2.PRISMA flow diagram for study selection.
ACP: advance care planning.
Characteristics of the included studies (n = 36).
| Study characteristics | |
|---|---|
| Type of study | |
| Quantitative study | 22 (61) |
| Qualitative study | 10 (28) |
| Mixed-methods study | 4 (11) |
| Country/region
| |
| South Korea
| 10 |
| China
| 6 |
| Hong Kong | 6 |
| Taiwan | 6 |
| Japan
| 4 |
| Singapore | 3 |
| Malaysia | 3 |
| Term related to ACP used
| |
| Advance care planning | 15 |
| Term related to ACP documents: | |
| Advance directive | 19 |
| DNR order/directive | 2 |
| Physician order for life-sustaining-treatment | 3 |
| Term related to ACP conversation: | |
| End-of-life decision-making | 5 |
| Advance directive decision-making | 1 |
| The element of ACP studied | |
| ACP as completion of documents | 14 |
| ACP as process of discussion on preferences | 13 |
| Both | 9 |
| Number of patients in the study | |
| 0–100 | 15 |
| 101–500 | 17 |
| 501–1000 | 1 |
| >1000 | 3 |
| Type of subjects studied | |
| Patients: | |
| - Cancer | 14 |
| - Non-cancer: | |
| Elderly with chronic serious illnesses | 16 |
| Chronic dialysis | 1 |
| - Not-specified non terminal serious illnesses | 4 |
| - Not-specified terminal illness | 1 |
| Setting | |
| Hospital | 23 |
| Palliative care unit or hospice | 3 |
| Elderly facility | 9 |
| No restriction in the setting | 1 |
ACP: advance care planning; DNR: do-not-resuscitate.
One study was conducted in South Korea, China, and Japan.
Several studies used more than one terms related to advance care planning.
Patients’ willingness to engage in advance care planning or to draft an advance directive.
| No | First author | Year | Country | Type of patient | Conceptualization of ACP | Patients’ willingness to engage in ACP | Percentage |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | Cheong K
| 2015 | Singapore | Patients with early cognitive impairment | Advance care planning is a process that aims to inform and facilitate medical decision-making to reflect patients’ values and preferences in the event that they cannot communicate their wishes. | Willing to engage in ACP | 39% |
| 2. | Hing Wong A
| 2016 | Malaysia | Patients on routine hemodialysis | Advance care planning is a process of communication among the patients, their families, and professional caregiver, which include, but is not limited to discussing preferences for life-sustaining treatments. | Willing to engage in ACP | 68% |
| 3. | Lo TJ
| 2017 | Singapore | Patients with early cognitive impairment | Advance care planning is a process that facilitates decision-making on future care and helps patients with chronic or terminal illnesses make known their wishes before they lose their ability to do so. | Willing to engage in ACP | 49% |
| 4. | Sung HC
| 2017 | Taiwan | Elders living in long-term care facility | Advance care planning is a process of discussion between individuals and their physicians, formal caregivers, families, and friends about their preferences and wishes for future care if the individual lacks the capacity to express their wishes. | Willing to engage in ACP | 42% |
| 5. | Hou XT
| 2018 | China | Patients with advanced cancer | Advanced care planning is the process whereby there is a discussion between individuals and their physicians, family, and friends about their preferences and wishes for future care at a time when they may lack the capacity to express such wishes. | Willing to engage in ACP: | a) 59% |
| 6. | Kizawa Y
| 2020 | Japan | Elderly patients with chronic disease | Not defined | Willingness to engage in ACP
| a) 3.2 ± 0.52 |
| 7. | Yoo SH
| 2020 | South Korea | Patients with advanced solid and/or hematologic cancer | Not defined | (a) Willing to engage in ACP with family | (a) 62% |
| No | First author | Year | Country | Type of patient | Conceptualization of AD | Patients’ willingness to draft an AD | Percentage |
| 1. | Chu LW
| 2011 | Hong Kong | Elderly living in long-term care facility | An advance directive is a statement, usually in writing, in which a person, when mentally competent, indicates the form of healthcare he or she would like to have in a future time when he or she is no longer competent | Willing to draft an AD | 88% |
| 2. | Ting FH
| 2011 | Hong Kong | Elderly in-patients with chronic diseases | Not defined | Willing to draft an AD if formally legalized | 49% |
| 3. | Ni P
| 2014 | China | Elders living in long-term care facility | An advance directive is a legal document that outlines a person’s care preferences and wishes, should their decision-making ability be diminished as a result of a critical illness or cognitive impairment. | Willing to draft an AD | 32% |
| 4. | Park J
| 2016 | South Korea | Elders living in long-term care facility | An advance directive is a written document specifying medical treatments that people want or do not want to receive in the event where the ability to communicate or make decisions is lost due to a progression of illness. | Willing to draft an AD | 59% |
| 5. | Hui EC
| 2017 | Hong Kong | Patients with solid cancer (any stage) | Not defined | Willing to draft an AD | 22% (and list treatment preferences); 12% (and assign proxy decision-maker) |
| 6. | An HJ
| 2019 | South Korea | Patients with terminal cancer | An advance directive is a legal document written by
anyone regardless of his/her illness, and it includes a
future medical care plan, living will, or designation of
power of attorney. | Willing to sign AD (POLST) | 52% |
| 7. | Kim JW
| 2019 | South Korea | Patients with advanced solid cancer | POLST is a part of an advance care planning with advance directives and is written by a doctor based on the patient’s wishes at the terminal stage. | Willing to draft AD (POLST) | 71% |
| 8. | Park HY
| 2019 | South Korea | Patients with cancer (any stage) | Advance directives are statement that an adult could write about the determination of life-sustaining treatment and utilization of hospice at a terminal stage. | Willing to draft an AD: | (a) 59% |
| 9. | Feng C
| 2020 | China | Patients with lung cancer (any stage) | Advance directives are legal documents in which people choose the medical treatments they are, or are not, willing to receive if in the future they lose the capacity to talk about their wishes. | Willing to sign AD | 80% |
| 10. | Yoo SH
| 2020 | South Korea | Patients with advanced solid and/or hematologic cancer | Not defined | (a) Willing to draft an AD: | (a) |
ACP: advance care planning; AD: advance directive, CPR: cardiopulmonary resuscitation; HCPs: healthcare professionals; POLST: physician order for life-sustaining-treatment; SD: standard deviation.
Higher score indicates greater willingness.
Underlying motives for patients’ willingness or unwillingness to engage in advance care planning.
| Motivational drivers for engagement in advance care planning | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Qualitized data | Qualitative codes | Integrated themes | Conceptual framework variables |
| Patients’ belief that ACP would ensure their wishes to be respected
| Patients’ belief that ACP would promote
autonomy[ | Patients’ belief that ACP would promote autonomy | Behavioral beliefs |
| Patients’ awareness of future incapacity[ | |||
| Patients’ wish to exercise self-determination[ | |||
| Patients’ belief that ACP would ensure a comfortable end of life
| Patients’ wish to have comfort near the end of
their life[ | Patients’ belief that ACP would enable a comfortable end of life | |
| Patients’ belief that quality of life is more important than
length of life
| |||
| Patients’ belief that ACP would prevent them from the
suffering due to meaningless treatment
| |||
| Patients’ belief that ACP would avoid causing burden to the
family with end of life decision[ | Patients’ wish to avoid being a burden to their
family[ | Patients’ belief that ACP would avoid causing burden to the family or society | |
| Patients’ belief that ACP would avoid burdening the society
| |||
| Patients’ wish to ease the economic burden on the family
| |||
| Patients’ belief that ACP would prevent conflict between
family members
| Patients’ belief that ACP would create
connection with the family
| Patients’ belief that ACP would facilitate shared understanding between patient and family | |
| Patients wish that ACP would help family understand their
wishes at an early stage
| |||
| Patients’ experience with the death of a relative/friend
| Patients’ positive experience with ACP[ | Patients’ belief that ACP is beneficial after their experience with end of life or ACP | |
| Patients’ religious beliefs
| Patients’ religious beliefs | Normative beliefs | |
| Patients’ wish to follow physician’s recommendation for ACP
| Patients’ wish to follow physician’s recommendation for ACP | ||
| Motivational drivers for non-engagement in advance care planning | |||
| Qualitized data | Qualitative codes | Integrated themes | Conceptual framework variables |
| Patients’ lack of knowledge of own disease state
| Patients’ lack of illness
understanding[ | Patients’ lack of illness understanding | Knowledge |
| Patients’ concern of lacking the information needed for decision-making
| |||
| Patients’ lack of awareness of AD[ | Incomplete understanding/lack of awareness regarding
ACP[ | Patients’ limited understanding of ACP | |
| Patients’ lack of knowledge about AD[ | Patients’ lack of understanding of ACP relevance
for planning beyond financial arrangements[ | ||
| Patients’ need of more information
| |||
| Patients’ lack of understanding of the policy
| |||
| Patients’ lack of idea on how to approach end of life communication
| |||
| Patients’ belief that ACP is not useful
| Patients inability to appreciate what intent of
ACP[ | Patients’ belief that ACP is not necessary or beneficial | Behavioral beliefs |
| Patients’ belief that talking about ACP would
make their relatives sad
| Patients’ concern that ACP would cause distress or burden
for family members[ | Patients’ concern of implications of ACP | |
| Patients’ concern that ACP would cause conflict within their
family members[ | |||
| Patients’ concern of the psychological discomfort produced
when thinking about a terminal illness
| Patient’s concern that they would feel
uncomfortable discussing end of life issues/lose of
hope[ | ||
| Patients’ discomfort in talking about death
| |||
| Patients’ belief that talking about ACP would make them sad
| |||
| Patients’ belief that drafting AD would mean giving up or
result to being abandoned by the physicians
| Patient’s belief that discussing end of life
would bring bad luck (taboo)[ | ||
| Patients’ belief that signing AD would lead to bad things
| |||
| Patients’ uncertainty whether their wish would be respected
| Patients’ doubted about the effectiveness of ACP in
conveying their wishes
| Patients’ doubted about the effectiveness of ACP in conveying their wishes | |
| Motivational drivers for non-engagement in advance care planning | |||
| Qualitized data | Qualitative codes | Integrated themes | Conceptual framework variables |
| Patients’ belief that family does not support their
engagement in ACP[ | Patients’ belief that family does not support their engagement in ACP | Normative beliefs | |
| Patients’ belief that HCPs do not advocate ACP[ | Patients’ belief that HCPs do not advocate ACP | ||
| Patients’ wish to let the nature take its course
| Patients’ wish to seek harmony with the mandate of nature
| Patients’ belief that ACP goes against their faith/religious beliefs | |
| Patients’ religious beliefs
| Patients’ belief in providence[ | ||
| Patients’ concern of difficulties of making decisions in advance
| Patients’ concern of difficulty in planning for the
unknown/unpredictable disease course[ | Patients’ concern of difficulty in planning for the unknown | Control beliefs |
| Patients’ concern that their decision may change
later[ | Patients’ concern that their decisions may change in the
future[ | ||
| Patients considered ACP irrelevant due to their
socioeconomic dependency[ | Patients’ sense of limited options for future care | ||
| Patients’ belief of limited options available for them in
the future care
| |||
| Patients’ belief that limited care continuity hampers ACP
| Patients’ sense of the lack of healthcare supporting system for ACP | ||
| Patients’ belief that time constraint from HCPs side hampers ACP
| |||
| Patients’ belief that HCPs lack the communication skills and
empathy for ACP
| Patients’ belief that HCPs lack the skills for ACP | ||
| Willingness to engage in ACP in particular approaches | |||
| Qualitized data | Qualitative codes | Integrated themes | Conceptual framework variables |
| Patient act as sole primary decision maker in ACP[ | Patient as independent decision maker in ACP[ | Patients’ preference for active involvement in decision-making, individually | Actors and roles |
| Patient, together with family and/or HCPs, as decision maker
in ACP[ | Patient, together with family and/or HCPs, as
decision maker in ACP
| Patient preference for active involvement in decision-making, together with the family and/or HCPs | |
| Patients’ wish to discuss with the family
| |||
| Patients’ wish to entrust decision-making to the
relatives[ | Patients’ wish to entrust decision-making to
family members[ | Patients’ preference for passive involvement in decision-making | |
| Patients belief the family will make the best decision on
their behalf[ | |||
| Patients’ wish to entrust decision-making to the
physicians[ | Patients’ belief that the physicians would “do what is
right”[ | ||
| Patients’ belief that there is no need to think about
drafting an AD now
| Patients’ belief that it’s too early to engage
in ACP[ | Patients’ preference of timing for initiation of ACP | Timing |
| Patients’ belief that it’s too early for ACP
| |||
| Patients’ belief that ACP is not necessary in their current age
| |||
| Patients’ belief that it’s not the right time yet
| |||
| Patients’ need of more time to think[ | |||
| Patients belief that drafting an AD is important[ | Patients’ preference of ACP formality | Formality | |
| Patients’ preference to further discuss with family
| Patients’ belief that informal planning would
suffice[ | ||
ACP: advance care planning; AD: advance directive, HCPs: healthcare professionals.
Figure 3.Conceptual framework for patients’ willingness to engage in ACP.
ACP: advance care planning; HCPs: healthcare professionals.