Patient Experience Research Centre, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
ProsPECT Study Public Advisor, Patient Experience Research Centre, School of Public Health, Imperial College London, London, United Kingdom.
PLoS One. 2023 Sep 21;18(9):e0291984. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0291984. eCollection 2023.
People living with frailty risk adverse outcomes following even minor illnesses. Admission to hospital or the intensive care unit is associated with potentially burdensome interventions and poor outcomes. Decision-making during an emergency is fraught with complexity and potential for conflict between patients, carers and clinicians. Advance care planning is a process of shared decision-making which aims to ensure patients are treated in line with their wishes. However, planning for future care is challenging and those living with frailty are rarely given the opportunity to discuss their preferences. The aim of the ProsPECT (Prospective Planning for Escalation of Care and Treatment) study was to explore perspectives on planning for treatment escalation in the context of frailty. We spoke to people living with frailty, their carers and clinicians across primary and secondary care.
In-depth online or telephone interviews and online focus groups. The topic guide explored frailty, acute decision-making and planning for the future. Data were thematically analysed using the Framework Method. Preliminary findings were presented to a sample of study participants for feedback in two online workshops.
We spoke to 44 participants (9 patients, 11 carers and 24 clinicians). Four main themes were identified: frailty is absent from treatment escalation discussions, planning for an uncertain future, escalation in an acute crisis is 'the path of least resistance', and approaches to facilitating treatment escalation planning in frailty.
Barriers to treatment escalation planning include a lack of shared understanding of frailty and uncertainty about the future. Emergency decision-making is focussed on survival or risk aversion and patient preferences are rarely considered. To improve planning discussions, we recommend frailty training for non-specialist clinicians, multi-disciplinary support, collaborative working between patients, carers and clinicians as well as broader public engagement.
虚弱的人即使患轻微疾病也会有不良后果。住院或入住重症监护病房会带来潜在的负担性干预和不良后果。在紧急情况下做出决策充满了复杂性,并且患者、护理人员和临床医生之间可能存在冲突。预先护理计划是一个共同决策的过程,旨在确保患者按照自己的意愿接受治疗。然而,未来护理的规划具有挑战性,虚弱的人很少有机会讨论他们的偏好。ProSPECT(治疗升级和治疗计划的前瞻性规划)研究的目的是探讨在虚弱背景下规划治疗升级的观点。我们与初级和二级保健中的虚弱患者、护理人员和临床医生进行了交谈。
深入的在线或电话访谈和在线焦点小组。主题指南探讨了虚弱、急性决策和未来规划。使用框架方法对数据进行主题分析。初步结果在两个在线研讨会上展示给了一部分研究参与者,征求反馈意见。
我们与 44 名参与者(9 名患者、11 名护理人员和 24 名临床医生)进行了交谈。确定了四个主要主题:虚弱在治疗升级讨论中缺失、为不确定的未来做计划、急性危机中的升级是“阻力最小的路径”,以及在虚弱中促进治疗升级规划的方法。
治疗升级规划的障碍包括对虚弱缺乏共同理解和对未来的不确定性。紧急决策侧重于生存或避险,很少考虑患者的偏好。为了改善规划讨论,我们建议为非专科临床医生提供虚弱培训、多学科支持、患者、护理人员和临床医生之间的协作工作以及更广泛的公众参与。