Palliative Medicine Service of Centro Hospitalar de Trás-os-Montes e Alto Douro, Avenida da Noruega, Lordelo, 5000-508, Vila Real, Portugal.
Faculty of Medicine, MEDCIDS-Department of Community Medicine, Information and Decision in Health, University of Porto, 4200-450, Porto, Portugal.
BMC Palliat Care. 2023 Jul 1;22(1):84. doi: 10.1186/s12904-023-01203-7.
The influence of demographic factors on the completion and knowledge of the Portuguese Advance Directives (PAD) and the Health Care Proxy's (HCP) role is still not clear.
To identify sociodemographic features associated with knowledge and adherence to PAD and HCP in palliative care.
Cross-Sectional analysis of the sociodemographic data, PAD and HCP role knowledge, and PAD Register from a group of Portuguese palliative patients and their caregivers enrolled on the DAVPAL trial to test the PAD efficacy in promoting better concordance between patients and caregivers.
One hundred twenty participants (60 palliative patients and 60 caregivers).
After enrollment, the participants' sociodemographic data was acquired, their knowledge of PAD and the role of an HCP was questioned, and their prior register of the PAD was asked.
60 patients and 60 caregivers were included (n=120), with differences among them regarding age (p<.001), gender (p=.003), education (p<.001), job (p<.001), marital status (p=.043), and access to the internet (p=.003), but not regarding religion (p=.21). Only 13.3% of the participants were aware of PAD, 15.0% were aware of the HCP role, and 5.0% had previously filled a PAD. Religious beliefs (Non-Catholic) were the only sociodemographic factor significantly related to these three topics.
There is low awareness of PAD and the HCP's role in palliative care, and there is higher knowledge on these topics among non-Catholic individuals. End-of-life decisions seem to be influenced by similarities in religious beliefs between patients and HCP. Improving education is necessary, namely in palliative care.
ClinicalTrials.gov ID NCT05090072 . Retrospectively registered on 22/10/2021.
人口因素对葡萄牙预先指示(PAD)的完成和了解以及医疗保健代理人(HCP)角色的影响尚不清楚。
确定与姑息治疗中 PAD 和 HCP 知识和依从性相关的社会人口学特征。
对一组葡萄牙姑息治疗患者及其参加 DAVPAL 试验以测试 PAD 在促进患者和护理人员之间更好一致性方面的疗效的护理人员的社会人口学数据、PAD 和 HCP 角色知识以及 PAD 登记进行横断面分析。
120 名参与者(60 名姑息治疗患者和 60 名护理人员)。
入组后,获取参与者的社会人口学数据,询问他们对 PAD 和 HCP 角色的了解,并询问他们之前的 PAD 登记情况。
共纳入 60 名患者和 60 名护理人员(n=120),他们在年龄(p<.001)、性别(p=.003)、教育(p<.001)、职业(p<.001)、婚姻状况(p=.043)和互联网访问(p=.003)方面存在差异,但宗教信仰(非天主教)(p=.21)除外。只有 13.3%的参与者了解 PAD,15.0%的人了解 HCP 的角色,5.0%的人之前填写过 PAD。宗教信仰(非天主教)是与这三个主题唯一显著相关的社会人口学因素。
姑息治疗中对 PAD 和 HCP 角色的认识较低,非天主教个体对这些主题的认识较高。临终决策似乎受到患者和 HCP 之间宗教信仰相似性的影响。需要提高教育水平,尤其是在姑息治疗方面。
ClinicalTrials.gov ID NCT05090072。于 2021 年 10 月 22 日回顾性注册。