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Efficacy of a Church-Based, Culturally Tailored Program to Promote Completion of Advance Directives Among Asian Americans

Authors :
Angela Sun
Quynh Bui
Joyce Cheng
Janice Y. Tsoh
Tung T. Nguyen
Ginny Gildengorin
Stephen J. McPhee
Joanne Chan
Ky Q. Lai
Source :
Journal of immigrant and minority health, vol 19, iss 2
Publication Year :
2016
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2016.

Abstract

Having an Advance Directive (AD) can help to guide medical decision-making. Asian Americans (AA) are less likely than White Americans to complete an AD. This pilot study investigated the feasibility and efficacy of a church-based intervention to increase knowledge and behavior change related to AD among Chinese and Vietnamese Americans. This study utilized a single group pre- and post-intervention design with 174 participants from 4 churches. Domain assessed: demographics; AD-related knowledge, beliefs, attitudes, and intentions; AD completion; and conversations with a healthcare proxy. Data were analyzed using Chi square and multiple logistic regression techniques. We observed significant increases in participants' AD-related knowledge, intentions, and a gain in supportive beliefs and attitudes about AD, resulting in 71.8% AD completion, and 25.0% having had a proxy conversation. Providing culturally-tailored intervention and step-by-step guidance can help to achieve significant changes in AD related knowledge and behavior in AA church goers.

Details

ISSN :
15571920 and 15571912
Volume :
19
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Immigrant and Minority Health
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....58966d704518a1f6ab5070dc7fa368d9