TY - JOUR
T1 - An integrative review of stakeholder views on advance care directives (ACD) : barriers and facilitators to initiation, documentation, storage, and implementation
AU - Hemsley, Bronwyn
AU - Meredith, Jacqueline
AU - Bryant, Lucy
AU - Wilson, Nathan J.
AU - Higgins, Isabel
AU - Georgiou, Andrew
AU - Hill, Sophie
AU - Balandin, Susan
AU - McCarthy, Shaun
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - Objective: To examine the views and experiences of patients and their health care providers on developing advance care planning (ACP) and advance care directives (ACD); and determine barriers and facilitators to ACD development, storage, and use, including implications for people with communication disability. Method: An integrative review of 93 studies, analysed according to their content themes. Results: Content themes encapsulated the initiation, documentation, and implementation stages of ACP/ACD. Lack of guidance for initiating and supporting ACP/ACD impedes discussions, and both patients and healthcare providers avoid discussions owing to fear of dying and reluctance to think about end-of-life. Conclusions: There are several barriers and facilitators to the initiation of ACP discussions, documentation and implementation of ACD, and little research exploring the views of legal professionals on the development, storage, or use of ACP documents. Further research is needed to explore the timing and responsibility of both legal and health professionals in initiating and supporting ACP discussions. Practice Implications: It is important for healthcare providers to raise ACP discussions regularly so that patients have time to make informed advance care decisions. Storage of the document in an electronic health record might facilitate better access to and implementation of patients’ end-of-life care decisions.
AB - Objective: To examine the views and experiences of patients and their health care providers on developing advance care planning (ACP) and advance care directives (ACD); and determine barriers and facilitators to ACD development, storage, and use, including implications for people with communication disability. Method: An integrative review of 93 studies, analysed according to their content themes. Results: Content themes encapsulated the initiation, documentation, and implementation stages of ACP/ACD. Lack of guidance for initiating and supporting ACP/ACD impedes discussions, and both patients and healthcare providers avoid discussions owing to fear of dying and reluctance to think about end-of-life. Conclusions: There are several barriers and facilitators to the initiation of ACP discussions, documentation and implementation of ACD, and little research exploring the views of legal professionals on the development, storage, or use of ACP documents. Further research is needed to explore the timing and responsibility of both legal and health professionals in initiating and supporting ACP discussions. Practice Implications: It is important for healthcare providers to raise ACP discussions regularly so that patients have time to make informed advance care decisions. Storage of the document in an electronic health record might facilitate better access to and implementation of patients’ end-of-life care decisions.
KW - advance directives (medical care)
KW - attitudes
KW - barriers
KW - terminal care
KW - terminally ill
UR - http://handle.westernsydney.edu.au:8081/1959.7/uws:50315
U2 - 10.1016/j.pec.2019.01.007
DO - 10.1016/j.pec.2019.01.007
M3 - Article
SN - 1873-5134
SN - 0738-3991
VL - 102
SP - 1067
EP - 1079
JO - Patient Education and Counseling
JF - Patient Education and Counseling
IS - 6
ER -