The effect of end-of-life decision-making tools on patient and family-related outcomes of care among ethnocultural minorities: A systematic review

Author:

Nayfeh AyahORCID,Conn Lesley Gotlib,Dale CraigORCID,Kratina Sarah,Hales Brigette,Das Gupta Tracey,Chakraborty Anita,Taggar Ru,Fowler Robert

Abstract

Background End-of-life decision-making tools are used to establish a shared understanding among patients, families and healthcare providers about medical treatment and goals of care. This systematic review aimed to understand the availability and effect of end-of-life decision-making tools on: (i) goals of care and advance care planning; (ii) patient and/or family satisfaction and well-being; and (iii) healthcare utilization among racial/ethnic, cultural, and religious minorities. Methods A search was conducted in four electronic databases (inception to June 2021). Articles were screened for eligibility using pre-specified criteria. We focused on adult patients (aged ≥18 years) and included primary research articles that used quantitative, qualitative, and mixed-methods designs. Complementary quality assessment tools were used to generate quality scores for individual studies. Extracted data were synthesized by outcome measure for each type of tool, and an overall description of findings showed the range of effects. Results Among 14,316 retrieved articles, 37 articles were eligible. We found that advance care planning programs (eleven studies), healthcare provider-led interventions (four studies), and linguistically-tailored decision aids (three studies) increased the proportion of patients documenting advance care plans. Educational tools (three studies) strongly reduced patient preferences for life-prolonging care. Palliative care consultations (three studies) were strongly associated with do-not-resuscitate orders. Advance care planning programs (three studies) significantly influenced the quality of patient-clinician communication and healthcare provider-led interventions (two studies) significantly influenced perceived patient quality of life. Conclusion This review identified several end-of-life decision-making tools with impact on patient and family-related outcomes of care among ethnocultural minorities. Advance care planning programs, healthcare provider-led interventions and decision aids increased documentation of end-of-life care plans and do-not-resuscitate orders, and educational tools reduced preferences for life-prolonging care. Further research is needed to investigate the effect of tools on healthcare utilization, and with specific patient population subgroups across different illness trajectories and healthcare settings.

Funder

Sunnybrook AFP Association through the Innovation Fund of the Alternative Funding Plan from the Academic Health Sciences Centres of Ontario

Department of Critical Care Medicine at Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council

Global Institute of Palliative, Psychosocial and End-of-Life Care

Division of Palliative Medicine, University of Toronto

Department of Medicine, University of Toronto

Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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