Default options represent the events or conditions that are set into place if no alternatives are actively chosen. The setting of default options has well-established effects on a broad range of human decisions, but its influence on patients' preferences for end-of-life care is only beginning to be understood. This is a 3-armed randomized clinical trial in Veterans at high risk for critical illness, assessing the impact of Advance Directive (AD) forms framed with different default options. The central goals are to assess how default options in ADs influence the end-of-life care choices made by patients at risk for critical care, and these patients' hospital and ICU utilization. The investigators hypothesize that setting defaults in real ADs will increase the proportion of Veterans selecting comfort-oriented plans of care, decrease selections of life-extending therapies such as mechanical ventilation and dialysis, and reduce the proportion of time during follow-up that Veterans spend in the hospital and/or ICU, without affecting patient satisfaction with end-of-life care planning.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
62
Consenting subjects will be randomly assigned to one of 3 study arms. Subjects will receive a different AD form based on which arm they have been randomly assigned. Once a completed AD form is received, a debriefing session will be held to alert patients to exactly how the 3 ADs used in the study differ. Once patients are fully informed about the variations in the ADs, the patients will have an opportunity to change their AD selections prior to finalizing them as a part of their medical record. A final satisfaction interview will take place with a research associate who will contact patients via telephone to administer a satisfaction questionnaire.
Consenting subjects will be randomly assigned to one of 3 study arms. Subjects will receive a different AD form based on which arm they have been randomly assigned. Once a completed AD form is received, a debriefing session will be held to alert patients to exactly how the 3 ADs used in the study differ. Once patients are fully informed about the variations in the ADs, the patients will have an opportunity to change their AD selections prior to finalizing them as a part of their medical record. A final satisfaction interview will take place with a research associate who will contact patients via telephone to administer a satisfaction questionnaire.
Consenting subjects will be randomly assigned to one of 3 study arms. Subjects will receive a different AD form based on which arm they have been randomly assigned. Once a completed AD form is received, a debriefing session will be held to alert patients to exactly how the 3 ADs used in the study differ. Once patients are fully informed about the variations in the ADs, the patients will have an opportunity to change their AD selections prior to finalizing them as a part of their medical record. A final satisfaction interview will take place with a research associate who will contact patients via telephone to administer a satisfaction questionnaire.
Philadelphia Veterans Affairs Medical Center
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States
Evaluate how the setting of defaults influences the proportion of Veterans selecting comfort-oriented plans of care in real ADs
The primary outcome is the proportion of patients in each of the 3 groups who select a general plan of care that prioritizes comfort over life extension.
Time frame: 18 months
Assess the influence of default options in ADs on Veterans' selections of specific life-extending therapies
The proportions of patients electing to receive each of the 5 specific life-extending interventions
Time frame: 18 months
Determine whether setting defaults in ADs influences the proportion of time during follow-up that Veterans spend in the hospital or ICU
The proportion of time during a 6-18 month follow-up (median 1 year) that patients spend in the hospital or ICU for each AD group
Time frame: 18 months
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