• J Am Geriatr Soc · Jan 2009

    A clinical framework for improving the advance care planning process: start with patients' self-identified barriers.

    • Adam D Schickedanz, Dean Schillinger, C Seth Landefeld, Sara J Knight, Brie A Williams, and Rebecca L Sudore.
    • University of California at San Francisco, 94121, USA.
    • J Am Geriatr Soc. 2009 Jan 1;57(1):31-9.

    ObjectivesTo explore barriers to multiple advance care planning (ACP) steps and identify common barrier themes that impede older adults from engaging in the process as a whole.DesignDescriptive study.SettingGeneral medicine clinic. San Francisco County.ParticipantsOne hundred forty-three English and Spanish speakers aged 50 and older (mean 61) enrolled in an advance directive preference study.MeasurementSix months after reviewing two advance directives, self-reported ACP engagement and barriers to each ACP step were measured with open- and closedended questions using quantitative and qualitative (thematic content) analyses.ResultsForty percent of participants did not contemplate ACP, 46% did not discuss with family or friends, 80% did not discuss with their doctor, and 90% did not document ACP wishes. Six barrier themes emerged: perceiving ACP as irrelevant (84%), personal barriers (53%), relationship concerns (46%), information needs (36%), health encounter time constraints (29%), and problems with advance directives (29%). Some barriers were endorsed at all steps (e.g., perceiving ACP as irrelevant). Others were endorsed at individual steps (e.g., relationship concerns for family or friend discussions, time constraints for doctor discussion, and problems with advance directives for documentation).DiscussionPerceiving ACP to be irrelevant was the barrier theme most often endorsed at every ACP step. Other barriers were endorsed at specific steps. Understanding ACP barriers may help clinicians prioritize and address them and may also provide a framework for tailoring interventions to improve ACP engagement.

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