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Advance Care Planning in Older Adults with CKD: Patient, Care Partner, and Clinician Perspectives.

Authors :
Ladin K
Neckermann I
D'Arcangelo N
Koch-Weser S
Wong JB
Gordon EJ
Rossi A
Rifkin D
Isakova T
Weiner DE
Source :
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN [J Am Soc Nephrol] 2021 Jun 01; Vol. 32 (6), pp. 1527-1535. Date of Electronic Publication: 2021 Apr 07.
Publication Year :
2021

Abstract

Background: Older patients with advanced CKD are at high risk for serious complications and death, yet few discuss advance care planning (ACP) with their kidney clinicians. Examining barriers and facilitators to ACP among such patients might help identify patient-centered opportunities for improvement.<br />Methods: In semistructured interviews in March through August 2019 with purposively sampled patients (aged ≥70 years, CKD stages 4-5, nondialysis), care partners, and clinicians at clinics in across the United States, participants described discussions, factors contributing to ACP completion or avoidance, and perceived value of ACP. We used thematic analysis to analyze data.<br />Results: We conducted 68 semistructured interviews with 23 patients, 19 care partners, and 26 clinicians. Only seven of 26 (27%) clinicians routinely discussed ACP. About half of the patients had documented ACP, mostly outside the health care system. We found divergent ACP definitions and perspectives; kidney clinicians largely defined ACP as completion of formal documentation, whereas patients viewed it more holistically, wanting discussions about goals, prognosis, and disease trajectory. Clinicians avoided ACP with patients from minority groups, perceiving cultural or religious barriers. Four themes and subthemes informing variation in decisions to discuss ACP and approaches emerged: ( 1 ) role ambiguity and responsibility for ACP, ( 2 ) questioning the value of ACP, ( 3 ) confronting institutional barriers (time, training, reimbursement, and the electronic medical record, EMR), and ( 4 ) consequences of avoiding ACP (disparities in ACP access and overconfidence that patients' wishes are known).<br />Conclusions: Patients, care partners, and clinicians hold discordant views about the responsibility for discussing ACP and the scope for it. This presents critical barriers to the process, leaving ACP insufficiently discussed with older adults with advanced CKD.<br /> (Copyright © 2021 by the American Society of Nephrology.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1533-3450
Volume :
32
Issue :
6
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Journal of the American Society of Nephrology : JASN
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
33827902
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1681/ASN.2020091298