Roughly half of people with living wills or other types of advanced
medical directives were not suffering from a chronic illness, the
researchers note.
“Improving end-of-life care has been a national conversation for
some time now, presumably because it will affect all of us at some
point and is a very personal matter,” said senior study author Dr.
Katherine Courtright of the Fostering Improvement in End-of-Life
Decision Science Program at the University of Pennsylvania in
Philadelphia.
The conversation has revived since Medicare, the federal health
insurance program for people over age 65, began reimbursing
physicians for advance-care planning counseling on January 1, 2016.
“This is a comprehensive national snapshot of the most widely
promoted tool for end-of-life care planning and suggests that there
is plenty of room to increase its reach,” she told Reuters Health by
email.
Courtright’s team analyzed 150 studies published between 2000 and
2015 that reported on advanced directive completion in the United
States. The studies included both healthy and sick patients, some
focused on specific diseases or different types of advanced
directives or particular populations. In total, they covered nearly
796,000 adults, of whom 64 percent were women, 65 percent were
white, 81 percent were age 65 and older and 63 percent were in a
nursing home.
The research team found that 36.7 percent of adults completed an
advanced directive of some kind: 29 percent had living wills, 33
percent had health care powers of attorney and 32 percent had
undefined advanced directives.
Older patients and those in hospice or palliative care were more
likely to have an advanced directive, and end-of-life care documents
were more common among those with neurologic disease such as
dementia and least common among those with HIV/AIDS, according to
the results published in Health Affairs.
But overall, 38.2 percent of people with a chronic illness had
advanced directives compared to 32.7 percent of healthy people, a
difference that wasn’t statistically meaningful.
“It was somewhat surprising how much the completion rate varied
based on age, patient location and diagnosis, yet even among those
with the highest completion rates, nearly half still hadn’t
completed them,” Courtright said.
“The fact that only a third of sick patients are expressing their
end-of-life wishes means we’re in trouble,” said Dr. Melissa
Wachterman of Harvard Medical School in Boston, who wasn’t involved
in the study.
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“Everybody should have this conversation because our values and
preferences change over time,” she told Reuters Health in a phone
interview. “A healthy 72-year-old may say she wants a breathing
tube, but that choice may change.”
One limitation of the study is that it doesn’t include many
population groups that may not document their end-of-life care
wishes formally or trust medical or legal forms that dictate
advanced directives, the authors note.
“As I like to say, the form is only as good as the conversation and
the shared understanding that goes along with it,” said Dr. Rebecca
Sudore of the University of California, San Francisco School of
Medicine who wasn’t involved in the study.
“Some people do fill out these forms with families or lawyers, and
then the forms sit in the dusty recesses of a back drawer and they
are not available or shared with family and friends, especially
before they are needed,” she told Reuters Health by email.
Advanced care planning advocates and researchers are looking for
ways to reduce the barriers to completing directives by removing
legal jargon, changing the reading level and revising the medical
terms used.
Sudore recommends PrepareForYourCare.org for easy-to-read
directives. Other organizations, such as Aging with Dignity (http://bit.ly/2v9EjBq),
promote family conversations by starting with “Five Wishes” they
want for the end of life.
“At the end of the day, I’ve heard from too many families that they
couldn’t agree on what to do for mom or dad, and it’s often not on
your radar until it’s too late,” said Paul Malley, president of
Aging with Dignity in Tallahassee, Florida, in a phone interview.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2sNbgD7 Health Affairs, online July 5, 2017.
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