Department of Emergency Medicine and Department of Palliative Medicine, The George Washington University School of Medicine and Health Sciences, Washington, District of Columbia, USA.
Department of Emergency Medicine, York Hospital, York, Pennsylvania, USA.
Int J Health Plann Manage. 2024 Nov;39(6):1778-1789. doi: 10.1002/hpm.3833. Epub 2024 Aug 6.
Clinicians in the emergency department (ED) frequently encounter seriously ill patients at a time when advance directives may be pivotal in improved clinician decision-making. The objectives of this study were to identify the prevalence of advanced directives in ED patients, as well as patterns of advance care discussions between patients and providers. This study describes patients' perceptions and expectations of such serious illness discussions in an emergency care setting with the expectation of including patients as strategic members of the care team.
Trained research assistants in two emergency departments surveyed patients over age 65, or their caregivers, from July 2016 to August 2018. Patients were verbally administered a standard survey tool related to advance directives and advance care planning.
497 out of 877 patients completed surveys (59.4%). 50% of patients reported having an advance care planning document. The large majority (92%) of patients with an advance directive had not been asked about it during their ED visit. When questioned about their personal preferences, 79% of patients thought emergency physicians should be aware of their wishes regarding life-sustaining treatments and end-of-life care. Paradoxically, only 38% expressed a desire to discuss advance care plans with an ED clinician.
Older patients expect emergency clinicians to be aware of their care preferences, yet most are not asked about these care preferences in the ED. The large gap between patient preference and reality suggests the need for more targeted discussion by ED clinicians and translation of patient perspectives into system healthcare improvements. Future studies should explore barriers to advance care planning in the ED as well as patient preferences for these conversations to support a true healthcare learning system.
临床医生在急诊科(ED)经常遇到重病患者,而预先指示在改善临床医生决策方面可能至关重要。本研究的目的是确定 ED 患者中预先指示的流行情况,以及患者和提供者之间的预先护理讨论模式。本研究描述了在紧急护理环境中患者对这种严重疾病讨论的看法和期望,期望将患者作为护理团队的战略成员。
两名急诊部门的培训研究助理从 2016 年 7 月至 2018 年 8 月对 65 岁以上的患者或其护理人员进行了调查。患者通过口头方式接受了与预先指示和预先护理计划相关的标准调查工具。
497 名 877 名患者中完成了调查(59.4%)。50%的患者报告有预先护理计划文件。绝大多数(92%)有预先指示的患者在 ED 就诊期间未被询问过。当被问及个人喜好时,79%的患者认为急诊医生应该了解他们对维持生命治疗和临终关怀的愿望。矛盾的是,只有 38%的患者表示希望与 ED 临床医生讨论预先护理计划。
老年患者希望急诊临床医生了解他们的护理偏好,但大多数患者在 ED 中未被询问这些护理偏好。患者偏好与现实之间的巨大差距表明,ED 临床医生需要更有针对性地讨论,并将患者观点转化为系统医疗保健的改进。未来的研究应该探讨 ED 中预先护理计划的障碍以及患者对这些对话的偏好,以支持真正的医疗保健学习系统。