Effectiveness of interventions to increase participation in advance care planning for people with a diagnosis of dementia: A systematic review

Author:

Bryant Jamie123ORCID,Turon Heidi123,Waller Amy123,Freund Megan123,Mansfield Elise123,Sanson-Fisher Rob123

Affiliation:

1. Health Behaviour Research Collaborative, The University of Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia

2. Priority Research Centre for Health Behaviour, The University of Newcastle, Newcastle, NSW, Australia

3. Hunter Medical Research Institute, Newcastle, NSW, Australia

Abstract

Background: Advance care planning involves considering, discussing and documenting future wishes in case a person is unable to make or communicate decisions. Given people with dementia are at high risk of future decisional incapacity, it is critical that advance care planning occurs early in the illness trajectory. Aim: To determine (1) the number of intervention studies published between 1997 and July 2017 that aimed to increase advance care planning for persons with dementia, (2) the methodological quality of studies and (3) the effectiveness of interventions in increasing advance care planning for persons with dementia. Design: Systematic review. Data sources: Medline, Cochrane, EMBASE, PsycINFO and CINAHL were searched for articles published from 1997 to July 2017. Studies were included if they utilised a methodologically robust study design and reported on an intervention designed to increase participation in advance care planning for persons with dementia that was targeted at the person with dementia and/or a carer/family member. Methodological quality was assessed independently by two authors. Results: Four studies met the criteria for inclusion. Methodological quality was variable. Two studies did not report analyses comparing advance care planning outcomes for intervention and control participants. A third study found no effect for a nurse-facilitator intervention. The fourth study found that a structured conversation about end-of-life care with a family member increased the likelihood of advance care orders being listed in residents’ records. Conclusion: There is little evidence about effective strategies to improve participation in advance care planning for persons with dementia. Methodologically rigorous intervention trials are needed to test interventions that encourage timely participation.

Funder

NHMRC-ARC Dementia Research Fellowship to Jamie Bryant

ARC Discovery Early Career Researcher Award (DECRA) fellowship to Amy Waller

NHMRC Translating Research into Practice (TRIP) fellowship to Megan Freund

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,General Medicine

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