Across race, ethnicity, and language : an intervention to improve advance care planning documentation unmasks health disparities

Article indépendant

DUTTA, Priyanka A. | FLYNN, Sarah J. | OREPER, Sandra | KANTOR, Molly A. | MOURAD, Michelle

Background: Racial and ethnic minority groups are less likely to have advance directives and living wills, despite the importance of advanced care planning (ACP) in end-of-life care. We aimed to understand the impact of an intervention to improve ACP documentation across race, ethnicity, and language on hospitalized patients at our institution. Methods: We launched an intervention to improve the rates of ACP documentation for hospitalized patients aged >75 or with advanced illness defined by the International Classification of Diseases 10th Revision codes. We analyzed ACP completion rates, preintervention, and intervention, and used interrupted time-series analyses to measure the differential impact of the intervention across race, ethnicity, and language. Key Results: A total of 10,220 patients met the inclusion criteria. Overall rates of ACP documentation improved from 13.9% to 43.7% in the intervention period, with a 2.47% monthly increase in ACP documentation compared to baseline (p < .001). During the intervention period, the rate of ACP documentation increased by 2.72% per month for non-Hispanic White patients (p < .001), by 1.84% per month for Latinx patients (p < .001), and by 1.9% per month for Black patients (p < .001). Differences in the intervention trends between non-Hispanic White and Latinx patients (p = .04) and Black patients (p = .04) were significant. Conclusions: An intervention designed to improve ACP documentation in hospitalized patients widened a disparity across race and ethnicity with Latinx and Black patients having lower rates of improvement. Our findings reinforce the need to measure the impact of quality improvement interventions on existing health disparities and to implement specific strategies to prevent worsening disparities.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/jhm.13248

Voir la revue «Journal of hospital medicine, 19»

Autres numéros de la revue «Journal of hospital medicine»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Across race, ethnicity, and language : an int...

Article | DUTTA, Priyanka A. | Journal of hospital medicine | n°1 | vol.19

Background: Racial and ethnic minority groups are less likely to have advance directives and living wills, despite the importance of advanced care planning (ACP) in end-of-life care. We aimed to understand the impact of an interve...

Capturing what matters : a retrospective obse...

Article | SUN, Fangdi | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°2 | vol.36

Background: Advance care planning allows patients to share their preferences for medical care with the aim of ensuring goal-concordant care in times of serious illness. The morbidity and mortality of the COVID-19 pandemic has incr...

Capturing what matters : a retrospective obse...

Article indépendant | SUN, Fangdi | PALLIATIVE MEDICINE | n°2 | vol.36

Background: Advance care planning allows patients to share their preferences for medical care with the aim of ensuring goal-concordant care in times of serious illness. The morbidity and mortality of the COVID-19 pandemic has incr...

De la même série

Across race, ethnicity, and language : an int...

Article indépendant | DUTTA, Priyanka A. | Journal of hospital medicine | n°1 | vol.19

Background: Racial and ethnic minority groups are less likely to have advance directives and living wills, despite the importance of advanced care planning (ACP) in end-of-life care. We aimed to understand the impact of an interve...

Advance directives completion and hospital ou...

Article indépendant | ZHU, Yujun | Journal of hospital medicine | n°6 | vol.17

Introduction: Health care costs remain high at the end of life. It is not known if there is a relationship between advance directive (AD) completion and hospital out-of-pocket costs. This analysis investigated whether AD completio...

Death among patients hospitalized with sympto...

Article indépendant | STEFAN, Mihaela S. | Journal of hospital medicine | n°4 | vol.17

BACKGROUND: We aimed to examine the role played by the COVID-19 infection in patients' death and to determine the proportion of patients for whom it was a major contributor to death. METHODS: We included patients = 50 years old wh...

Limitation of life-sustaining care in the cri...

Article indépendant | MCPHERSON, Katie | Journal of hospital medicine | vol.14

When life-sustaining treatments (LST) are no longer effective or consistent with patient preferences, limitations may be set so that LSTs are withdrawn or withheld from the patient. Many studies have examined the frequency of limi...

High-flow nasal cannula oxygen in patients wi...

Article indépendant | WILSON, Michael E. | Journal of hospital medicine | vol.14

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: High-flow nasal cannula (HFNC) oxygen may provide tailored benefits in patients with preset treatment limitations. The objective of this study was to assess the effectiveness of HFNC oxygen in patients w...

Chargement des enrichissements...