Physicians' Views on Advance Care Planning and End‐of‐Life Care Conversations

OBJECTIVES To evaluate physicians' views on advance care planning, goals of care, and end‐of‐life conversations. DESIGN Random sample telephone survey. SETTING United States. PARTICIPANTS Physicians (primary care specialists; pulmonology, cardiology, oncology subspecialists) actively practicing...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS) 2018-06, Vol.66 (6), p.1201-1205
Hauptverfasser: Fulmer, Terry, Escobedo, Marcus, Berman, Amy, Koren, Mary Jane, Hernández, Sandra, Hult, Angela
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container_end_page 1205
container_issue 6
container_start_page 1201
container_title Journal of the American Geriatrics Society (JAGS)
container_volume 66
creator Fulmer, Terry
Escobedo, Marcus
Berman, Amy
Koren, Mary Jane
Hernández, Sandra
Hult, Angela
description OBJECTIVES To evaluate physicians' views on advance care planning, goals of care, and end‐of‐life conversations. DESIGN Random sample telephone survey. SETTING United States. PARTICIPANTS Physicians (primary care specialists; pulmonology, cardiology, oncology subspecialists) actively practicing medicine and regularly seeing patients aged 65 and older (N=736; 81% male, 75% white, 66% aged ≥50. MEASUREMENTS A 37‐item telephone survey constructed by a professional polling group with national expert oversight measured attitudes and perceptions of barriers and facilitators to advance care planning. Summative data are presented here. RESULTS Ninety‐nine percent of participants agreed that it is important to have end‐of‐life conversations, yet only 29% reported that they have formal training for such conversations. Those most likely to have training included younger physicians and those caring for a racially and ethnically diverse population. Patient values and preferences were the strongest motivating factors in having advance care planning conversations, with 92% of participants rating it extremely important. Ninety‐five percent of participants reported that they supported a new Medicare fee‐for‐service benefit reimbursing advance care planning. The biggest barrier mentioned was time availability. Other barriers included not wanting a patient to give up hope and feeling uncomfortable. CONCLUSION With more than half of physicians reporting that they feel educationally unprepared, there medical school curricula need to be strengthened to ensure readiness for end‐of‐life conversations. Clinician barriers need to be addressed to meet the needs of older adults and families. Policies that focus on payment for quality should be evaluated at regular intervals to monitor their effect on advance care planning.
doi_str_mv 10.1111/jgs.15374
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DESIGN Random sample telephone survey. SETTING United States. PARTICIPANTS Physicians (primary care specialists; pulmonology, cardiology, oncology subspecialists) actively practicing medicine and regularly seeing patients aged 65 and older (N=736; 81% male, 75% white, 66% aged ≥50. MEASUREMENTS A 37‐item telephone survey constructed by a professional polling group with national expert oversight measured attitudes and perceptions of barriers and facilitators to advance care planning. Summative data are presented here. RESULTS Ninety‐nine percent of participants agreed that it is important to have end‐of‐life conversations, yet only 29% reported that they have formal training for such conversations. Those most likely to have training included younger physicians and those caring for a racially and ethnically diverse population. Patient values and preferences were the strongest motivating factors in having advance care planning conversations, with 92% of participants rating it extremely important. Ninety‐five percent of participants reported that they supported a new Medicare fee‐for‐service benefit reimbursing advance care planning. The biggest barrier mentioned was time availability. Other barriers included not wanting a patient to give up hope and feeling uncomfortable. CONCLUSION With more than half of physicians reporting that they feel educationally unprepared, there medical school curricula need to be strengthened to ensure readiness for end‐of‐life conversations. Clinician barriers need to be addressed to meet the needs of older adults and families. 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DESIGN Random sample telephone survey. SETTING United States. PARTICIPANTS Physicians (primary care specialists; pulmonology, cardiology, oncology subspecialists) actively practicing medicine and regularly seeing patients aged 65 and older (N=736; 81% male, 75% white, 66% aged ≥50. MEASUREMENTS A 37‐item telephone survey constructed by a professional polling group with national expert oversight measured attitudes and perceptions of barriers and facilitators to advance care planning. Summative data are presented here. RESULTS Ninety‐nine percent of participants agreed that it is important to have end‐of‐life conversations, yet only 29% reported that they have formal training for such conversations. Those most likely to have training included younger physicians and those caring for a racially and ethnically diverse population. Patient values and preferences were the strongest motivating factors in having advance care planning conversations, with 92% of participants rating it extremely important. Ninety‐five percent of participants reported that they supported a new Medicare fee‐for‐service benefit reimbursing advance care planning. The biggest barrier mentioned was time availability. Other barriers included not wanting a patient to give up hope and feeling uncomfortable. CONCLUSION With more than half of physicians reporting that they feel educationally unprepared, there medical school curricula need to be strengthened to ensure readiness for end‐of‐life conversations. Clinician barriers need to be addressed to meet the needs of older adults and families. 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DESIGN Random sample telephone survey. SETTING United States. PARTICIPANTS Physicians (primary care specialists; pulmonology, cardiology, oncology subspecialists) actively practicing medicine and regularly seeing patients aged 65 and older (N=736; 81% male, 75% white, 66% aged ≥50. MEASUREMENTS A 37‐item telephone survey constructed by a professional polling group with national expert oversight measured attitudes and perceptions of barriers and facilitators to advance care planning. Summative data are presented here. RESULTS Ninety‐nine percent of participants agreed that it is important to have end‐of‐life conversations, yet only 29% reported that they have formal training for such conversations. Those most likely to have training included younger physicians and those caring for a racially and ethnically diverse population. 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subjects advance care planning
Advance directives
end of life
palliative care
Primary care
serious illness
title Physicians' Views on Advance Care Planning and End‐of‐Life Care Conversations
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