Evaluation of a Decision Aid About Life-sustaining Therapies
- Conditions
- Decision MakingGoals-of-careResuscitationIntensive Care UnitShared-decision Making
- Interventions
- Behavioral: decision aid
- Registration Number
- NCT04034979
- Lead Sponsor
- Laval University
- Brief Summary
Introduction: Clinical practice guidelines recommend shared decision making (SDM) to facilitate goals-of-care discussions. This study will train clinicians about how to use a context-adapted decision aid (DA) and SDM to conduct goals-of-care discussions with the elderly. The objectives of this study are to: 1) determine if the use of the DA and SDM training program: a) increase clinicians' engagement of patients in decision making regarding their goals of care; b) increase adoption of evidence-based behaviours regarding goals-of-care decision making; and 2) identify patients' most frequent incomprehension, concerns, questions and clinicians' opportunities to improve the skills in goals-of-care decision making.
Methods: This study will have three phases. Phase I (May-June 2017) will be a baseline evaluation of the current goals-of-care decision making process with elderly patients in a single ICU setting (Levis, Quebec). Phase II (July-August 2017) will be an evaluation of the goals-of-care decision making process in the same ICU using a DA. Phase III (September-December 2017) will be the delivery of an online and in-person training session about the use of the DA and about how to conduct discussions about goals-of-care. The study will then evaluate the goals-of-care decision making process after completion of the training program and using the DA. The investigators will observe and audio- or video-record all eligible elderly-intensivist dyads discussing goals of care during each phase. Two investigators will analyse the recordings using the OPTION 12 scale (measuring the extent that clinicians engage patients in SDM) and the ACCEPT quality indicators (measuring the extent to which intensivists engage in best practice goals-of-care discussions). The investigators will conduct qualitative content analysis of the video and audio records to identify patients' most frequent incomprehension, concerns, questions and clinicians' opportunities to improve the goals-of-care decision-making skills.
Deliverables: This study will produce evidence regarding the impact of a context-adapted DA and training program on clinicians' adoption of SDM and other best practice behaviors regarding goals-of-care decision making with the elderly, and evidence regarding the most frequent patients' incomprehension, concerns, questions and clinicians' opportunities to improve the goals-of-care decision-making skills.
- Detailed Description
Not available
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 26
- aged 65 and older,
- capable of making their own healthcare decisions as determined by the attending intensivist's clinical judgment,
- in need of a discussion about goals of care as determined by the attending intensivist's clinical judgment.
- intubated patients,
- patients facing urgent decisions,
- patients cared by the principal investigator,
- patients who do not read or speak French.
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- SEQUENTIAL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Phase III- Impact of the decision aid and the decision aid This phase will be an evaluation of the decision making process about goals-of-care in the same local ICU setting after intensivists complete the training program and using the DA. A PhD student will collect sociodemographic data (age, gender, education level, religion), observe and video record (or audio record) new dyads of physicians and newly admitted elderly patients discussing goals-of-care using the context-adapted decision aid and the new skills learned in the training program. Phase II-Impact of the decision aid decision aid The two following months will be an evaluation of the decision making process about goals-of-care in the same local ICU setting using only the decision aid without any training. A PhD student will collect sociodemographic data (age, gender, education level, religion), observe and video record (or audio record) new dyads of physicians and newly admitted elderly patients discussing goals-of-care, whether the physician chooses to use the context-adapted decision-aid or not.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Observing Patient Involvement in Decision Making (OPTION) scale The OPTION scale will be measured at the earliest possible time during the patients' intensive care stay (eg., first 24 hours after admission or whenever the patient is capable of engaging in a goals-of-care discussion). The OPTION scale (12 items) measures the extent that clinicians engage patients in shared decision making. For each item, a score 0 (The behaviour is not observed) to 4 (The behaviour is observed and executed to a high standard) is given. Adding each item's score will arrive at a number between 0 (minimum) and 48 (maximum). The OPTION scale will be measured by two observers rating audio- or video-recordings of goals-of-care discussions conducted by intensivists with their patients at the earliest possible time during the patients intensive care stay. These discussions will be held at the discretion of the attending intensivist when deemed appropriate. Most often these discussions are held at the time of patient admission (first 24 hours) or whenever the patient is capable of engaging in a goals of care discussion (eg., after the patient is extubated and weaned off mechanical ventilation).
Score based on the quality indicators from the Audit of Communication, Care Planning, and Documentation (ACCEPT) study The quality indicators will be measured at the earliest possible time during the patients' intensive care stay (eg., first 24 hours after admission or whenever the patient is capable of engaging in a goals-of-care discussion. This measure will be based on 7 of the 34 (ACCEPT) quality indicators that measure the quality of end-of-life communication and decision making: written information provided before discussion about goals of care, poor prognosis shared with patient during the discussion, verification with patient about prior discussions or written documents about the use of life-sustaining treatments, use of information by intensivist about about goals of care to support the decision, verification by the intensivist prior to the discussion of any written advanced directives in the patient's medical record, documentation of the goals of care discussed in medical record after discussion, goals of care documented in the medical chart after discussion consistent with patient's stated preferences. Indicators will be measured by two observers rating audio- or video-recordings. Score is the sum of the quality indicator items divided by the sum of highest possible values of these items on a scale 0% to 100%.
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Qualitative content analysis The audio and video recordings will be done at the earliest possible time during the patients' intensive care stay (eg., first 24 hours after admission or whenever the patient is capable of engaging in a goals-of-care discussion. Each audio or video recording will be content analysed by a doctoral student and a research assistant using the R language Qualitative Data Analysis (RQDA) package for Qualitative Data Analysis. The aim of this content analysis will be to identify: 1) patients' most frequent incomprehension, concerns, questions and 2) clinicians' opportunities to improve their skills in goals-of-care discussions and decision making.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Centre de recherche de l'Hôtel-Dieu de Lévis
🇨🇦Lévis, Quebec, Canada