Association of an Advance Care Planning Video and Communication Intervention With Documentation of Advance Care Planning Among Older Adults: A Nonrandomized Controlled Trial

COVID-19 has disproportionately killed older adults and racial and ethnic minority individuals, raising questions about the relevance of advance care planning (ACP) in this population. Video decision aids and communication skills training offer scalable delivery models. To assess whether ACP video d...

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Veröffentlicht in:JAMA network open 2022-02, Vol.5 (2), p.e220354-e220354
Hauptverfasser: Volandes, Angelo E, Zupanc, Sophia N, Paasche-Orlow, Michael K, Lakin, Joshua R, Chang, Yuchiao, Burns, Edith A, LaVine, Nancy A, Carney, Maria T, Martins-Welch, Diana, Emmert, Kaitlin, Itty, Jennifer E, Moseley, Edward T, Davis, Aretha D, El-Jawahri, Areej, Gundersen, Daniel A, Fix, Gemmae M, Yacoub, Andrea M, Schwartz, Pamela, Gabry-Kalikow, Shira, Garde, Cynthia, Fischer, Jonathan, Henault, Lori, Burgess, Leah, Goldman, Julie, Kwok, Anne, Singh, Nimisha, Alvarez Suarez, Armando L, Gromova, Valeria, Jacome, Sonia, Tulsky, James A, Lindvall, Charlotta
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Zusammenfassung:COVID-19 has disproportionately killed older adults and racial and ethnic minority individuals, raising questions about the relevance of advance care planning (ACP) in this population. Video decision aids and communication skills training offer scalable delivery models. To assess whether ACP video decision aids and a clinician communication intervention improved the rate of ACP documentation during an evolving pandemic, with a focus on African American and Hispanic patients. The Advance Care Planning: Communicating With Outpatients for Vital Informed Decisions trial was a pre-post, open-cohort nonrandomized controlled trial that compared ACP documentation across the baseline pre-COVID-19 period (September 15, 2019, to March 14, 2020), the COVID-19 wave 1 period (March 15, 2020, to September 14, 2020), and an intervention period (December 15, 2020, to June 14, 2021) at a New York metropolitan area ambulatory network of 22 clinics. All patients 65 years or older who had at least 1 clinic or telehealth visit during any of the 3 study periods were included. The primary outcome was ACP documentation. A total of 14 107 patients (mean [SD] age, 81.0 [8.4] years; 8856 [62.8%] female; and 2248 [15.9%] African American or Hispanic) interacted with clinicians during the pre-COVID-19 period; 12 806 (mean [SD] age, 81.2 [8.5] years; 8047 [62.8%] female; and 1992 [15.6%] African American or Hispanic), during wave 1; and 15 106 (mean [SD] 80.9 [8.3] years; 9543 [63.2%] female; and 2535 [16.8%] African American or Hispanic), during the intervention period. Clinicians documented ACP in 3587 patients (23.8%) during the intervention period compared with 2525 (17.9%) during the pre-COVID-19 period (rate difference [RD], 5.8%; 95% CI, 0.9%-7.9%; P = .01) and 1598 (12.5%) during wave 1 (RD, 11.3%; 95% CI, 6.3%-12.1%; P 
ISSN:2574-3805
2574-3805
DOI:10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2022.0354