What Is Good Advance Care Planning According to Hospitalized Palliative Patients and Their Families? An Explorative Study

Background: Advance care planning is not well implemented in Belgian hospital practice. In order to obtain successful implementation, implementation theory states that the adopters should be involved in the implementation process. This information can serve as a basis for creating better implementat...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of palliative care 2020-10, Vol.35 (4), p.236-242
Hauptverfasser: Vanderhaeghen, Birgit, Bossuyt, Inge, Menten, Johan, Rober, Peter
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container_end_page 242
container_issue 4
container_start_page 236
container_title Journal of palliative care
container_volume 35
creator Vanderhaeghen, Birgit
Bossuyt, Inge
Menten, Johan
Rober, Peter
description Background: Advance care planning is not well implemented in Belgian hospital practice. In order to obtain successful implementation, implementation theory states that the adopters should be involved in the implementation process. This information can serve as a basis for creating better implementation strategies. Aim: For this study, we asked hospitalized palliative patients and their families what they experienced as good advance care planning. Methods: Twenty-nine interviews were taken from patients and families, following the Tape Assisted Recall procedure of Elliot. These interviews were analyzed using content analysis based on grounded theory. To improve reliability, 3 independent external auditors audited the analysis. Results: Results show that hospitalized palliative patients and families want to have advance care planning communication about treatment and care throughout their disease and about different aspects: social, psychological, physical, practical, and medical. They prefer to have these conversations with their supervising physician. They report 4 important goals of advance care planning communication: establishing a trustful relationship with the physician, in which they feel the involvement of the physician; giving and receiving relevant information for the decision process, making a personal decision about which treatment and care are preferred; and finding consensus between the preferred decision of the physician, the patient and the family concerning the treatment and care policy. Conclusion: This study can contribute to advance care planning implementation in hospital practice because it gives in insight into which elements in advance care planning patients and families experience as necessary and when advance care planning is necessary to them.
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subjects Advance Care Planning
Advance directives
Belgium
Communication
Content analysis
Decision Making
Families & family life
Hospitalization
Humans
Palliative Care
Patient satisfaction
Patient-centered care
Reproducibility of Results
title What Is Good Advance Care Planning According to Hospitalized Palliative Patients and Their Families? An Explorative Study
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