Delivering Prognostic News to Older People with Chronic Disease: What Format Preference and Level of Involvement in Decision Making? A Hospital Survey

Author:

Lewis Ebony T.12ORCID,Hammill Kathrine3,Culbert Rebekah4,van der Merwe Madeleen5ORCID,Sahay Ashlyn6,Turner Robin7ORCID,Cardona Magnolia58ORCID

Affiliation:

1. School of Population Health, University of New South Wales, Sydney 2052, Australia

2. School of Psychology, The University of New South Wales, Sydney 2052, Australia

3. School of Science and Health, Western Sydney University, Campbelltown 2560, Australia

4. Occupational Therapy Services, Camden and Campbelltown Hospitals, Campbelltown 2560, Australia

5. Institute for Evidence-Based Healthcare, Bond University, Robina 4226, Australia

6. School of Nursing, Midwifery and Social Sciences, Central Queensland University, Mackay 4740, Australia

7. Biostatistics Unit, Otago Medical School, University of Otago, Dunedin 9054, New Zealand

8. EBP Professorial Unit, Gold Coast University Hospital, Southport 4215, Australia

Abstract

Shared decision making near end of life is a balancing act of communicating prognosis to patients and their surrogates/families and engaging them in considering value-concordant management choices. This cross-sectional survey aimed to determine the format in which older patients with chronic illnesses would prefer to receive prognostic information on their treatment options and disease progression, and their desired level of engagement in decision making. With a 60% participation rate, 139 inpatients in two hospitals and five surrogates were presented with six hypothetical scenarios with a randomly assigned sequence: verbal and written summary, graph, table, photo, video, and pamphlet. The majority (76%) of respondents chose the traditional verbal communication of prognosis by their doctor with a written summary as a reference and to share with family; the second choice was a condition-specific pamphlet (63%). Many found the graph and photo to be distressing (36% and 42%, respectively). Most (71%) wanted to know everything about their condition trajectory, and 63% chose shared decision making rather than completely autonomous or full delegation to clinicians or family. There were no gender differentials between wanting to know it all, supporting shared decision making or the preferred format for breaking news (p > 0.05). Older hospitalized patients with chronic conditions are willing to discuss end-of-life issues, learn about their prognosis, and be involved in shared decision making. Innovative formats such as graphs, videos, or photos were not welcome as part of the prognostic discussion.

Funder

Western Sydney University’s Women’s Fellowship grant

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Health Information Management,Health Informatics,Health Policy,Leadership and Management

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