Factors Contributing to Non-Concordance Between End-of-Life Care and Advance Care Planning
Journal
Journal of pain and symptom management
Journal Volume
67
Journal Issue
6
Start Page
544
End Page
553
ISSN
1873-6513
Date Issued
2024-06
Author(s)
Lee, Shih-Chieh
Chen, Shan-Ting
Lee, Ching-Yi
Li, Shin-Rung
Abstract
Despite making do-not-resuscitate or comfort care decisions during advance care planning, terminally ill patients sometimes receive life-sustaining treatments as they approach end of life. To examine factors contributing to nonconcordance between end-of-life care and advance care planning. In this longitudinal retrospective cohort study, terminally ill patients with a life expectancy shorter than six months, who had previously expressed a preference for do-not-resuscitate or comfort care, were followed up after palliative shared care intervention. An instrument with eight items contributing to non-concordant care, developed through literature review and experts' consensus, was employed. An expert panel reviewed electronic medical records to determine factors associated with non-concordant care for each patient. Statistical analysis, including descriptive statistics and the chi-square test, examines demographic characteristics, and associations. Among the enrolled 7871 patients, 97 (1.2%) received non-concordant care. The most prevalent factor was "families being too distressed about the patient's deteriorating condition and therefore being unable to let go" (84.5%) followed by "limited understanding of medical interventions among patients and surrogates" (38.1%), and "lack of patient participation in the decision-making process" (25.8%). This study reveals that factors related to relational autonomy, emotional support, and health literacy may contribute to non-concordance between advance care planning and end-of-life care. In the future, developing an advance care planning model emphasizes respecting relational autonomy, providing emotional support, and enhancing health literacy could help patients receiving a goal concordant and holistic end-of-life care.
Subjects
Advance care planning
End of life
Palliative care
Relational autonomy
Shared decision making
SDGs
Type
journal article
