Advance care planning has been recommended as an integral part of care for patients with life-limiting disease, but relevant development in Hong Kong is still in its infancy. This proposed study attempts to address this service gap by promoting advance care planning to patients with advanced disease. It is hypothesized that the proportion of patients whose end-of-life care preferences were known in the experimental group will be significantly higher than that in the control group.
This study aims to evaluate the impacts of a community-based advance care planning programme on end-of-life care of patients with advanced disease. A mixed-method approach, including a randomized controlled trial and qualitative interviews, will be used. Participants in the experimental group will received a structured advance care planning programme delivered by a trained facilitator. It includes an educational component, reflection and a family meeting.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
HEALTH_SERVICES_RESEARCH
Masking
TRIPLE
Enrollment
239
It is a multi-faceted programme which includes an educational component with support of multimedia materials, reflection on personal values and a facilitated discussion between patient and family carer over future care. It will be delivered to each pair of participant and family carer on individual basis. By the end of the programme, each participant will have a personal workbook summarising the advance care planning process for record.
Haven of Hope Hospital
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
End-of-life care preferences
In this study, end-of-life care preferences include goal for end-of-life care and decisions over the use of life-sustaining treatments relevant to individual's anticipated health changes. So, whether the patients' end-of-life care preferences is known at different timepoints will be determined based on (1) the congruence between patients' end-of-life care preferences and family carers' predicted end-of-life care preferences for patients; and (2) whether patients' end-of-life preferences are documented in their medical record.
Time frame: 6 months
Level of certainty about future care
The SURE test (Legare, Kearing, Clay, Gagnon, D'Amours, Rousseau \& O'Connor, 2010) will be used to measure the patient's level of decisional conflict in making decisions related to future care. Patients will be asked to rate their certainty in their future care on four items by using a dichotomous response format: yes or no. Good construct validity and reliability were demonstrated. It has previously been translated into Chinese and tested among local older people .
Time frame: 6 months
Health care utilization
Patient's medical records will be retrieved retrospectively six months after their enrolment to review their health care utilization over the study period, including the number of visits to the emergency department, unplanned admission, length of hospital stay, as well as investigation, procedures and treatment received.
Time frame: 6 months
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