Communication of advance care planning decisions: a retrospective cohort study of documents in general practice.


Journal

BMC palliative care
ISSN: 1472-684X
Titre abrégé: BMC Palliat Care
Pays: England
ID NLM: 101088685

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
14 Jul 2020
Historique:
received: 12 02 2020
accepted: 02 07 2020
entrez: 16 7 2020
pubmed: 16 7 2020
medline: 15 4 2021
Statut: epublish

Résumé

Doctors, particularly general practitioners, play a significant role in assisting patients to create advance care plans. When medically indicated, these documents are important tools to promote congruence between end-of-life care and patient's personal preferences. Despite this, little is known regarding the availability of these documents in hospitals. The aim of this study was to identify the proportion of people who died in hospital without an advance care plan and how many of these had advance care planning (ACP) documents in their general practice records. A retrospective cohort study was conducted of patient hospital records with manual linkage to general practice records. The large regional hospital in Victoria, Australia has a catchment population in excess of 300,000 people. The study sample was patients aged 75 years and over who died in the hospital between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2017. The hospital records of these patients were examined to identify those which did not have a system alert for ACP documents on the file. Alerted ACP documents were limited to those legislated in the state of Victoria: advance care plan, Enduring Power of Attorney (Medical Treatment) or Enduring Power of Guardianship. Where no ACP document system alert was found in the hospital record, the patient's nominated general practice was consented to participate and the corresponding general practice record was examined. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics. Of the 406 patients who died in hospital, 76.1% (309) did not have a system alert for any ACP document. Of the 309 hospital records without a system alert, 144 (46.7%) corresponding general practice records were examined. Of these, 14.6% included at least one ACP document, including four advance care plans, that were not available in hospital. Unless ACP documents are consistently communicated from general practice, patient's preferences may be unknown during end-of-life care. It is important that both doctors and patients are supported to use connected electronic health records to ensure that documents are readily available to healthcare staff when they are required.

Sections du résumé

BACKGROUND BACKGROUND
Doctors, particularly general practitioners, play a significant role in assisting patients to create advance care plans. When medically indicated, these documents are important tools to promote congruence between end-of-life care and patient's personal preferences. Despite this, little is known regarding the availability of these documents in hospitals. The aim of this study was to identify the proportion of people who died in hospital without an advance care plan and how many of these had advance care planning (ACP) documents in their general practice records.
METHODS METHODS
A retrospective cohort study was conducted of patient hospital records with manual linkage to general practice records. The large regional hospital in Victoria, Australia has a catchment population in excess of 300,000 people. The study sample was patients aged 75 years and over who died in the hospital between 1 January 2016 and 31 December 2017. The hospital records of these patients were examined to identify those which did not have a system alert for ACP documents on the file. Alerted ACP documents were limited to those legislated in the state of Victoria: advance care plan, Enduring Power of Attorney (Medical Treatment) or Enduring Power of Guardianship. Where no ACP document system alert was found in the hospital record, the patient's nominated general practice was consented to participate and the corresponding general practice record was examined. Data were analysed using descriptive statistics.
RESULTS RESULTS
Of the 406 patients who died in hospital, 76.1% (309) did not have a system alert for any ACP document. Of the 309 hospital records without a system alert, 144 (46.7%) corresponding general practice records were examined. Of these, 14.6% included at least one ACP document, including four advance care plans, that were not available in hospital.
CONCLUSIONS CONCLUSIONS
Unless ACP documents are consistently communicated from general practice, patient's preferences may be unknown during end-of-life care. It is important that both doctors and patients are supported to use connected electronic health records to ensure that documents are readily available to healthcare staff when they are required.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32664925
doi: 10.1186/s12904-020-00613-1
pii: 10.1186/s12904-020-00613-1
pmc: PMC7359590
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Sous-ensembles de citation

IM

Pagination

108

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Auteurs

Laura Panozzo (L)

School of Rural Health, Monash University, 26 Mercy Street, Bendigo, Victoria, 3550, Australia. lepan1@student.monash.edu.

Pam Harvey (P)

School of Rural Health, Monash University, 26 Mercy Street, Bendigo, Victoria, 3550, Australia.
La Trobe Rural Health School, Edwards Road, Bendigo, Victoria, 3550, Australia.

Meagan-Jane Adams (MJ)

Bendigo Health, 100 Barnard Street, Bendigo, Victoria, 3550, Australia.

Dennis O'Connor (D)

School of Rural Health, Monash University, 26 Mercy Street, Bendigo, Victoria, 3550, Australia.

Bernadette Ward (B)

School of Rural Health, Monash University, 26 Mercy Street, Bendigo, Victoria, 3550, Australia. bernadette.ward@monash.edu.

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Classifications MeSH