Understanding Informal Advance Care Planning in Middle Aged and Young-Old Adults
Rand Corporation, Santa Monica CA
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Abstract
Abstract Honoring patient preferences is a keystone of high-quality end-of-life (EOL) care. An important pathway to improve the likelihood of preference-concordant care at EOL is advance care planning (ACP), which has been shown to align treatments with documented patient preferences, as well as have other benefits to quality of care and survivor outcomes. Discussions in which patients express their wishes for EOL care are known as informal ACP (IACP). Most research to date has focused on formal (legal) ACP, or on ACP in older adults exclusively. In contrast, little is known about early IACP: discussions of EOL care preferences that take place in healthy middle age and older people, who are not yet facing imminent health threats. This study will used a mixed methods approach to characterize and document the prevalence of IACP conversations in healthy middle age (55-64) and young-old adults (65-74), focusing on the content and triggers of conversations, describing conversation partners, and identifying the extent to which IACP conversations overlap with other types of age-related planning, such as retirement planning. By focusing on middle age and young-old adults, this research will explore how IACP conversations begin and develop over time, and how health care planning is or is not similar to other conversations or planning people make for older age. Findings may inspire novel interventions to boost rates and quality of IACP, an important pathway to improving EOL care.
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