Ethnicity, race, and advance directives in an inpatient palliative care consultation service

Author:

Zaide Glenn B.,Pekmezaris Renee,Nouryan Christian N.,Mir Tanveer P.,Sison Cristina P.,Liberman Tara,Lesser Martin L.,Cooper Lynda.B.,Wolf-Klein Gisele P.

Abstract

AbstractObjective:Although race and ethnic background are known to be important factors in the completion of advance directives, there is a dearth of literature specifically investigating the effect of race and ethnicity on advance directive completion rate after palliative care consultation (PCC).Method:A chart review of all patients seen by the PCC service in an academic hospital over a 9-month period was performed. Data were compiled using gender, race, ethnicity, religion, and primary diagnosis. For this study, advance directives were defined as: “Do Not Resuscitate” (DNR) and/or “Do Not Intubate” (DNI).Results:Of the 400 medical records reviewed, 57% of patients were female and 71.3% documented their religion as Christian. The most common documented diagnosis was cancer (39.5%). Forty-seven percent reported their race as white. White patients completed more advance directives than did nonwhite patients both before (25.67% vs. 12.68%) and after (59.36% vs. 40.84%) PCC. There was a significantly higher proportion of whites who signed an advance directive after a PCC than of nonwhites (p = 0.021); of the 139 whites who did not have an advance directive at admission, 63 signed an advance directive after a PCC compared with 186/60 nonwhites (45% vs. 32%, respectively, p = 0.021). Further analysis revealed that African Americans differed from whites in the likelihood of advance directive execution rates pre-PCC, but not post-PCC.Significance of results:This study demonstrates the impact of a PCC on the completion of advance directives, on both whites and nonwhites. The PCC Intervention significantly reduced differences between whites and African Americans in completing advance directives, which have been consistently documented in the end-of-life literature.

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,General Medicine,General Nursing

Reference28 articles.

1. Wilkinson A. , Wenger N. & Shugarman L.R. (2007). Literature review on advance directives. http://aspe.hhs.gov/daltcp/reports/2007/advdirlr.pdf.

2. Physician Cultural Sensitivity in African American Advance Care Planning: A Pilot Study

3. United States Census Bureau. (2000). Racial and ethnic classifications used in census 2000 and beyond. http://www.census.gov/population/www/socdemo/race/racefactcb.html.

4. Early Palliative Care for Patients with Metastatic Non–Small-Cell Lung Cancer

5. ADVANCE DIRECTIVES, AUTONOMY AND UNINTENDED DEATH

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