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Serious Choices: A Systematic Environmental Scan of Decision Aids and Their Use for Seriously Ill People Near Death

Journal of Hospital Medicine 14(5). 2019 May;294-302. Published online first February 20, 2019. | 10.12788/jhm.3110

Seriously ill people near death face difficult decisions about life-sustaining treatments such as cardiopulmonary resuscitation and mechanical ventilation. Patient decision aids may improve alignment between patients’ preferences and the care they receive, but the quantity, quality, and routine use of these tools are unknown. We conducted a systematic environmental scan to identify all decision aids for seriously ill people at high risk of death facing choices about life-sustaining treatments, assess their quality, and explore their use in clinical settings. We searched MEDLINE, Google, and mobile application stores and surveyed experts. We included 27 decision aids in our scan. Concerning content, 14 of 27 decision aids for seriously ill people near death were for people with specific diseases and conditions (ie, advanced cancer or kidney disease); 11 concerned individual life-sustaining treatment decisions (ie, cardiopulmonary resuscitation or mechanical ventilation). Only two focused on more general care pathways (ie, life-sustaining intervention, palliative care, and hospice). Twenty-four of 27 decision aids presented options in a balanced way; 23 identified funding sources, and 19 of 27 reported their publication date. Just 11 used plain language. A minority, 11 of 27, listed evidence sources, five documented rigorous evidence-synthesis methods, six disclosed competing interests, and three offered update policies. Preliminary results suggest that few health systems use decision aids in routine patient care. Although many decision aids exist for life-sustaining treatment decisions during serious illness, the tools are deficient in some key quality areas.

© 2019 Society of Hospital Medicine

Acknowledgments

Pamela J. Bagley provided search strategy support. Meredith MacMartin provided clinical counsel. Amber Barnato provided comments and insight as an advisor and a new member of Catherine’s Ph.D. committee.

Author contributions

Catherine H. Saunders designed the study, with support from Marie-Anne Durand, Glyn Elwyn, and Kathryn Kirkland. Catherine H. Saunders conducted all screening, with support from Marie-Anne Durand. Khusbu Patel managed the inventory of decision aids. Catherine H. Saunders designed and distributed the key informant survey, with support from Marie-Anne Durand. Hyunkyung Kang and Catherine H. Saunders managed follow-up with key informants. Khusbu Patel and Catherine H. Saunders conducted the decision aid quality review. Catherine H. Saunders, Marie-Anne Durand, and Kathryn Kirkland screened decision aids to determine appropriateness for people with serious illness. Catherine H. Saunders drafted the manuscript, and all authors reviewed and approved it.

Ethical approval

The Dartmouth College Committee for the Protection of Human Subjects designated this project as exempt from further review. All survey participants confirmed their consent via an online form.

Disclosures

Ms. Saunders, Ms. Patel, Ms. Kang, and Dr. Kirkland have nothing to disclose. Dr. Elwyn reports personal fees from ACCESS Community Health Network, personal fees from EBSCO Health, personal fees from Chicago (Federally Qualified Medical Centers), outside the submitted work, and as Director of &think LLC, which owns the registered trademark for OptionGrids(TM) patient decision aids. He owns copyright in measures of shared decision making and care integration, namely collaboRATE, integRATE, Observer OPTION-5, and Observer OPTION-12, which are freely available for use. He is codeveloper of the OptionGrid patient decision aids, which are licensed to EBSCO Health. He has received reimbursement for travel, accommodations, and expenses from EBSCO Health, ACCESS Community Health Network, and Chicago (Federally Qualified Medical Centers). Dr. Durand reports personal fees from ACCESS Community Health Network, personal fees from EBSCO Health, outside the submitted work, and as codeveloper of the OptionGrid patient decision aids, which are licensed to EBSCO Health. She has received reimbursement for travel, accommodations, and expenses from EBSCO Health and ACCESS Community Health Network.

Financial conflicts of interest

Glyn Elwyn (GE) and Marie-Anne Durand (M-A D) have developed the Option Grid patient decision aids, which are licensed to EBSCO Health. They receive consulting income from EBSCO Health and may receive royalties in the future. M-A D is a consultant for ACCESS Community Health Network. No other competing interests declared.

Funding

The authors did not receive funding for this research.

Published protocol linked here: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/28825182

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