The feasibility and effectiveness of web-based advance care planning programs : scoping review

Article

VAN DER SMISSEN, Doris | OVERBEEK, Anouk | VAN DULMEN, Sandra | VAN GEMERT-PIJNEN, Lisette | VAN DER HEIDE, Agnes | RIETJENS, Judith Ac | KORFAGE, Ida J.

Background: Advance care planning (ACP) is a process with the overall aim to enhance care in concordance with patients’ preferences. Key elements of ACP are to enable persons to define goals and preferences for future medical treatment and care, to discuss these with family and health care professionals, and to document and review these if appropriate. ACP is usually conducted through personal conversations between a health care professional, a patient, and—if appropriate—family members. Although Web-based ACP programs have the potential to support patients in ACP, their effectiveness is unknown. Objective: This study aimed to assess the feasibility and effectiveness of Web-based, interactive, and person-centered ACP programs. Methods: We systematically searched for quantitative and qualitative studies evaluating Web-based, interactive, and person-centered ACP programs in seven databases including EMBASE, Web of Science, Cochrane Central and Google Scholar. Data on the characteristics of the ACP programs’ content (using a predefined list of 10 key elements of ACP), feasibility, and effectiveness were extracted using a predesigned form. Results: Of 3434 titles and abstracts, 27 studies met the inclusion criteria, evaluating 11 Web-based ACP programs—10 were developed in the United States and one in Ireland. Studied populations ranged from healthy adults to patients with serious conditions. Programs typically contained the exploration of goals and values (8 programs), exploration of preferences for treatment and care (11 programs), guidance for communication about these preferences with health care professionals or relatives (10 programs), and the possibility to generate a document in which preferences can be recorded (8 programs). Reportedly, participants were satisfied with the ACP programs (11/11 studies), considering them as easy to use (8/8 studies) and not burdensome (7/8 studies). Designs of 13 studies allowed evaluating the effectiveness of five programs. They showed that ACP programs significantly increased ACP knowledge (8/8 studies), improved communication between patients and their relatives or health care professionals (6/6 studies), increased ACP documentation (6/6 studies), and improved concordance between care as preferred by the patients and the decisions of clinicians and health care representatives (2/3 studies). Conclusions: Web-based, interactive, and person-centered ACP programs were mainly developed and evaluated in the United States. They contained the key elements of ACP, such as discussing and documenting goals and preferences for future care. As participants considered programs as easy to use and not burdensome, they appeared to be feasible. Among the 13 studies that measured the effectiveness of programs, improvement in ACP knowledge, communication, and documentation was reported. The concordance between preferred and received care is yet understudied. Studies with high-quality study designs in different health care settings are warranted to further establish the feasibility and effectiveness of Web-based ACP programs.

https://www.jmir.org/2020/3/e15578

Voir la revue «Journal of medical internet research, 22»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of medical internet research»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

The feasibility and effectiveness of web-base...

Article indépendant | VAN DER SMISSEN, Doris | Journal of medical internet research | n°3 | vol.22

Background: Advance care planning (ACP) is a process with the overall aim to enhance care in concordance with patients’ preferences. Key elements of ACP are to enable persons to define goals and preferences for future medical trea...

Information needs of patients with chronic di...

Article indépendant | VAN DER SMISSEN, Doris | BMC palliative care | n°1 | vol.20

Background: Advance care planning (ACP) enables persons to identify preferences for future treatment and care, and to discuss, record and review these preferences. However, the uptake of ACP among patients with chronic diseases is...

Information needs of patients with chronic di...

Article indépendant | VAN DER SMISSEN, Doris | BMC palliative care | n°1 | vol.20

Background: Advance care planning (ACP) enables persons to identify preferences for future treatment and care, and to discuss, record and review these preferences. However, the uptake of ACP among patients with chronic diseases is...

De la même série

Promoting public engagement in palliative and...

Article | WANG, Yijun | Journal of medical internet research | vol.27

BACKGROUND: In Chinese traditional culture, discussions surrounding death are often considered taboo, leading to a poor quality of death, and limited public awareness and knowledge about palliative and end-of-life care (PEoLC). Ho...

Advantages and challenges of using telehealth...

Article | STEINDAL, Simen A. | Journal of medical internet research | vol.25

BACKGROUND: Owing to the increasing number of people with palliative care needs and the current shortage of health care professionals (HCPs), providing quality palliative care has become challenging. Telehealth could enable patien...

Home-based pediatric palliative care and elec...

Article | HOLMEN, Heidi | Journal of medical internet research | n°2 | vol.22

BACKGROUND: Children and families in pediatric palliative care depend on close contact with health care personnel, and electronic health (eHealth) is suggested to support care at home by facilitating their remote interactions. OBJ...

Patients' experiences of telehealth in pallia...

Article | STEINDAL, Simen A. | Journal of medical internet research | n°5 | vol.22

BACKGROUND: Telehealth is increasingly being used in home care and could be one measure to support the needs of home-based patients receiving palliative care. However, no previous scoping review has mapped existing studies on the ...

Advance care planning among users of a patien...

Article | PORTZ, Jennifer D. | Journal of medical internet research | n°8 | vol.22

BACKGROUND: Advance care planning is the process of discussing health care treatment preferences based on patients' personal values, and it often involves the completion of advance directives. In the first months of 2020, a novel ...

Chargement des enrichissements...