Thursday, August 8, 2013

From Queen's U-Ontario: Development of advance care planning research priorities: a call to action

http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23923473


 2013 Summer;29(2):99-106.

Development of advance care planning research priorities: a call to action.

Source

Queen's Health Services Research Facility, Queen's University, Abramsky Hall, 21 Arch Street, Room 311, Kingston, Ontario, Canada. ana.johnson@queensu.ca

Abstract

The objective of this study was to develop a national, prioritized research agenda for advance care planning (ACP). We first identified a list of comprehensive ACP research topics and determined priority criteria through focus groups. We next conducted a survey wherein importance weights were assigned to priority criteria and each ACP topic was rated. We combined weights and ratings into overall scores. A total of 17 ACP topics were developed and placed into four categories: patients and family members, the general public, professionals, and the healthcare system. Four main priority criteria were created: feasibility, consistency with ethical and societal values, economic considerations, and impact. Of the 100 individuals we invited to participate in the survey, 62 accepted. Prioritized topics centred largely on the impact of ACP on health resource utilization, communicating advance care planning across settings, and the preferred manner of engaging patients in ACP.

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