Salmond Susan W, David Estrella
University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey, School of Nursing, Newark, USA.
Orthop Nurs. 2005 Mar-Apr;24(2):117-27; quiz 128-9. doi: 10.1097/00006416-200503000-00007.
The Patient Self-Determination Act (PSDA) (part of the ) requires that all healthcare institutions receiving Medicare and Medicaid funds inform patients about their right to participate in healthcare decisions, including their right to have an advance directive. Advance directives (ADs) allow an individual to participate indirectly in future medical care decisions if he or she becomes decisionally incapacitated. Despite passage of this bill and mechanisms within most healthcare institutions to provide this information, the AD completion rate remains low.
The purpose of this study was to identify the significant attitudes and factors that influence the completion of ADs among adult hospitalized patients admitted to medical/surgical units.
Descriptive correlational survey design.
A convenience sample of patients admitted to medical-surgical units during a 2-month period completed face-to-face interviews and completion of the Advance Directive Attitude Survey.
Eighty-two percent of the sample identified having received information on ADs, although hospital policy had it distributed to all patients on admission. Eighteen percent of the sample had completed an AD, and an additional 8% completed an AD after the interview and accompanying education during the interview for a 26% completion rate. The mean attitude toward ADs was slightly positive, and there was no difference in attitude score between those with an AD and those without.
Low completion rates of ADs among the majority of the population and even lower among ethnically diverse individuals despite favorable attitudes toward ADs suggest that there are factors beyond access to information that may influence the decision not to complete an AD. Results of this study are congruent with other research raising the question of whether ADs as currently designed are appropriate for all groups.
《患者自主决定法案》(《综合预算协调法案》的一部分)要求所有接受医疗保险和医疗补助资金的医疗机构告知患者他们参与医疗决策的权利,包括制定预先医疗指示的权利。预先医疗指示允许个人在其丧失决策能力时间接参与未来的医疗护理决策。尽管该法案已通过,且大多数医疗机构都有提供此类信息的机制,但预先医疗指示的完成率仍然很低。
本研究的目的是确定影响入住内科/外科病房的成年住院患者完成预先医疗指示的重要态度和因素。
描述性相关性调查设计。
在两个月期间入住内科/外科病房的患者便利样本完成了面对面访谈,并完成了预先医疗指示态度调查。
尽管医院政策规定在入院时将预先医疗指示的信息分发给所有患者,但样本中有82%的人表示已收到相关信息。样本中有18%的人完成了预先医疗指示,另有8%的人在访谈及访谈期间的相关教育后完成了预先医疗指示,完成率为26%。对预先医疗指示的平均态度略为积极,有预先医疗指示者和无预先医疗指示者的态度得分没有差异。
尽管大多数人对预先医疗指示持积极态度,但预先医疗指示的完成率较低,在不同种族个体中甚至更低,这表明除了获取信息之外,还有其他因素可能影响不完成预先医疗指示的决定。本研究结果与其他研究一致,引发了关于当前设计的预先医疗指示是否适用于所有群体的问题。