• J Palliat Med · Jan 2018

    Developing the Storyline for an Advance Care Planning Video for Surgery Patients: Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Engagement from Stakeholder Summit to State Fair.

    • Rebecca A Aslakson, SchusterAnne L RALR4 Department of Health Policy and Management, The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health , Baltimore, Maryland., Thomas J Lynch, Matthew J Weiss, Lydia Gregg, Judith Miller, Sarina R Isenberg, Norah L Crossnohere, Alison M Conca-Cheng, Angelo E Volandes, Thomas J Smith, and BridgesJohn F PJFP3 Palliative Care Program, Department of Oncology, The Sidney Kimmel Comprehensive Cancer Center at Johns Hopkins , Baltimore, Maryland..
    • 1 Department of Anesthesiology and Critical Care Medicine, The Johns Hopkins School of Medicine , Baltimore, Maryland.
    • J Palliat Med. 2018 Jan 1; 21 (1): 89-94.

    BackgroundPatient-centered outcomes research (PCOR) methods and social learning theory (SLT) require intensive interaction between researchers and stakeholders. Advance care planning (ACP) is valuable before major surgery, but a systematic review found no extant perioperative ACP tools. Consequently, PCOR methods and SLT can inform the development of an ACP educational video for patients and families preparing for major surgery.ObjectiveThe objective is to develop and test acceptability of an ACP video storyline.DesignThe design is a stakeholder-guided development of the ACP video storyline. Design-thinking methods explored and prioritized stakeholder perspectives. Patients and family members evaluated storyboards containing the proposed storyline.Setting/SubjectsThe study was conducted at hospital outpatient surgical clinics, in-person stakeholder summit, and the 2014 Maryland State Fair.MeasurementsMeasurements are done through stakeholder engagement and deidentified survey.ResultsStakeholders evaluated and prioritized evidence from an environmental scan. A surgeon, family member, and palliative care physician team iteratively developed a script featuring 12 core themes and worked with a medical graphic designer to translate the script into storyboards. For 10 days, 359 attendees of the 2014 Maryland State Fair evaluated the storyboards and 87% noted that they would be "very comfortable" or "comfortable" seeing the storyboard before major surgery, 89% considered the storyboards "very helpful" or "helpful," and 89% would "definitely recommend" or "recommend" this story to others preparing for major surgery.ConclusionsThrough an iterative process utilizing diverse PCOR engagement methods and informed by SLT, storyboards were developed for an ACP video. Field testing revealed the storyline to be highly meaningful for surgery patients and family members.

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