Honing an advance care planning intervention using qualitative analysis: the Living Well interview
UMass Chan Affiliations
Department of Family Medicine and Community HealthDepartment of Medicine, Division of Preventive and Behavioral Medicine
Document Type
Journal ArticlePublication Date
2003-08-01Keywords
Adult*Advance Care Planning
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
*Attitude to Death
Female
Humans
Interviews as Topic
Male
Middle Aged
*Palliative Care
*Quality of Life
Social Support
Spirituality
Geriatrics
Health Services Research
Public Health Education and Promotion
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Advance care planning requires an explicit and comprehensive discussion of patient values and conceptualization of quality of life. The Living Well open-ended interview intervention was developed to help patients and their health care agents to engage in a meaningful discussion of values so that decisions made in the last year of life are made with the patients' values in mind. We used qualitative and quantitative analysis to streamline this 10-question interview, and to generate hypotheses for future research. Interviews with 52 terminally ill patients were coded according to methodological weaknesses and content (support, spirit/feelings, palliative care, and quality of life). Node analysis revealed that three primary and three backup/probe questions yielded information that minimized misinformation, sampled from all four content areas, led to discussions of importance for good planning and decision-making, and may have led to earlier hospice admission than the national average. Two emerging themes, Generativity (passing on values or assets to the next generation) and essence (simple pleasures in everyday life), and were then quantitatively analyzed. People who mentioned generativity tended to be older, had a longer length of hospice stay, and a longer time to death after interview, compared to those who did not mention the theme. People who mentioned essence also tended to be older, but tended to have a shorter length of hospice stay and a shorter time to death after the interview. We conclude that this interview may improve access to hospice, and that generativity and essence are worthwhile themes for future research.Source
J Palliat Med. 2003 Aug;6(4):593-603. Link to article on publisher's siteDOI
10.1089/109662103768253704Permanent Link to this Item
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/44936PubMed ID
14516501Related Resources
Link to article in PubMedae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1089/109662103768253704