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Can Persons with Dementia Meaningfully Participate in Advance Care Planning Discussions? A Mixed-Methods Study of SPIRIT

Authors
Song, Mi-KyungWard, Sandra E.Hepburn, KennethPaul, SudeshnaKim, HyejinShah, Raj C.Morhardt, Darby J.Medders, LauraLah, James J.Clevenger, Carolyn C.
Issue Date
Nov-2019
Publisher
MARY ANN LIEBERT, INC
Keywords
advance care planning; Alzheimer's disease; dementia; end-of-life care; surrogate decision making
Citation
JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE, v.22, no.11, pp 1410 - 1416
Pages
7
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE MEDICINE
Volume
22
Number
11
Start Page
1410
End Page
1416
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/cau/handle/2019.sw.cau/44610
DOI
10.1089/jpm.2019.0088
ISSN
1096-6218
1557-7740
Abstract
Background: Despite the importance of persons with dementia (PWDs) engaging in advance care planning (ACP) at a time when they are still competent to appoint a surrogate decision maker and meaningfully participate in ACP discussions, studies of ACP in PWDs are rare. Objective: We conducted an intervention development study to adapt an efficacious ACP intervention, SPIRIT (sharing patient's illness representations to increase trust), for PWDs in early stages (recent Montreal Cognitive Assessment [MoCA] score >= 13) and their surrogates and assess whether SPIRIT could help PWDs engage in ACP. Design: A formative expert panel review of the adapted SPIRIT, followed by a randomized trial with qualitative interviews, was conducted. Patient-surrogate dyads were randomized to SPIRIT in person (in a private room in a memory clinic) or SPIRIT remote (via videoconferencing from home). Setting/Subjects: Twenty-three dyads of PWDs and their surrogates were recruited from an outpatient brain health center. Participants completed preparedness outcome measures (dyad congruence on goals of care, patient decisional conflict, and surrogate decision-making confidence) at baseline and two to three days post-intervention, plus a semistructured interview. Levels of articulation of end-of-life wishes of PWDs during SPIRIT sessions were rated (3 = expressed wishes very coherently, 2 = somewhat coherently, and 1 = unable to express coherently). Results: All 23 were able to articulate their end-of-life wishes very or somewhat coherently during the SPIRIT session; of those, 14 PWDs had moderate dementia. While decision-making capacity was higher in PWDs who articulated their wishes very coherently, MoCA scores did not differ by articulation levels. PWDs and surrogates perceived SPIRIT as beneficial, but the preparedness outcomes did not change pre-post. Conclusions: SPIRIT engaged PWDs and surrogates in meaningful ACP discussions, but requires testing of efficacy and long-term outcomes.
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Kim, Hye Jin
적십자간호대학 (간호학과)
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