Fine Robert L, Yang Zhiyong, Spivey Christy, Boardman Bonnie, Courtney Maureen
Office of Clinical Ethics and Palliative Care, Baylor Scott and White Health, Dallas, Texas (Fine); and the College of Business (Yang, Spivey), College of Engineering (Boardman), and College of Nursing and Health Innovation (Courtney), The University of Texas at Arlington, Arlington, Texas.
Proc (Bayl Univ Med Cent). 2016 Jul;29(3):263-7. doi: 10.1080/08998280.2016.11929430.
Barriers to traditional advance care planning (ACP) and advance directive (AD) creation have limited the promise of ACP/AD for individuals and families, the healthcare team, and society. Our objectives were to determine the results of a digital ACP/AD through which consumers create, store, locate, and retrieve their ACP/AD at no charge and with minimal physician involvement, and the ACP/AD can be integrated into the electronic health record. The authors chose 900 users of MyDirectives, a digital ACP/AD tool, to achieve proportional representation of all 50 states by population size and then reviewed their responses. The 900 participants had an average age of 50.8 years (SD = 16.6); 84% of the men and 91% of the women were in self-reported good health when signing their ADs. Among the respondents, 94% wanted their physicians to consult a supportive and palliative care team if they were seriously ill; nearly 85% preferred cessation of life-sustaining treatments during their final days; 76% preferred to spend their final days at home or in a hospice; and 70% would accept attempted cardiopulmonary resuscitation in limited circumstances. Most respondents wanted an autopsy under certain conditions, and 62% wished to donate their organs. In conclusion, analysis of early experience with this ACP/AD platform demonstrates that individuals of different ages and conditions can engage in an interrogatory process about values, develop ADs that are more nuanced than traditional paper-based ADs in reflecting those values, and easily make changes to their ADs. Online ADs have the potential to remove barriers to ACP/AD and thus further improve patient-centered end-of-life care.
传统的预立医疗计划(ACP)和预立医疗指示(AD)制定过程中存在的障碍,限制了ACP/AD对个人和家庭、医疗团队以及社会的益处。我们的目标是确定一种数字ACP/AD的效果,通过该数字工具,消费者可以免费创建、存储、查找和检索自己的ACP/AD,且医生参与度极低,并且该ACP/AD能够整合到电子健康记录中。作者选择了900名使用数字ACP/AD工具MyDirectives的用户,以实现按人口规模在所有50个州的比例代表性,然后审查他们的回复。这900名参与者的平均年龄为50.8岁(标准差 = 16.6);签署AD时,84%的男性和91%的女性自我报告健康状况良好。在受访者中,94%希望如果自己身患重病,医生能咨询支持性和姑息治疗团队;近85%倾向于在生命的最后几天停止维持生命的治疗;76%倾向于在自己家中或临终关怀机构度过最后的日子;70%会在有限的情况下接受心肺复苏尝试。大多数受访者希望在某些条件下进行尸检,62%希望捐赠自己的器官。总之,对该ACP/AD平台早期经验的分析表明,不同年龄和状况的个人能够参与关于价值观的询问过程,制定出比传统纸质AD更能细微反映这些价值观的AD,并轻松更改自己的AD。在线AD有可能消除ACP/AD的障碍,从而进一步改善以患者为中心的临终护理。