Advance Care Planning in Asia: A Systematic Narrative Review of Healthcare Professionals’ Knowledge, Attitude, and Experience

Martina, Diah and Lin, Cheng-Pei and Kristanti, Martina S. and Bramer, Wichor M. and Mori, Masanori and Korfage, Ida J. and van der Heide, Agnes and van der Rijt, Carin C.D. and Rietjens, Judith A.C. (2021) Advance Care Planning in Asia: A Systematic Narrative Review of Healthcare Professionals’ Knowledge, Attitude, and Experience. Journal of the American Medical Directors Association, 22 (2). 349.e1 – 349.e28. ISSN 15258610

Full text not available from this repository. (Request a copy)

Abstract

Objective: The value of advance care planning (ACP) for patients with life-limiting illnesses is widely recognized but Asian health care professionals' (HCPs') perspectives on ACP have received little systematic attention. We aim to synthesize evidence regarding Asian HCPs’ knowledge of, attitudes toward, and experiences with ACP. Design: Systematic review with narrative synthesis and stepwise thematic analysis. Setting and Participants: HCPs in southern, eastern, and southeastern Asia. Methods: Studies from inception to September 2019 were identified from English-language searches of Embase, MEDLINE, Web of Science, and Google Scholar with reference-chaining and hand-searching. Two investigators independently screened and assessed the risk of bias in all original studies reporting HCPs’ knowledge of, attitudes toward, and experiences with ACP, including their perspectives toward barriers and facilitators of ACP. Results: Fifty-one studies were included; 42 were quantitative, 43 had been conducted in high-income countries, and 36 were of good quality. Twenty-six studies operationalized ACP as the completion of an advance directive rather than a value-exploration process. Thirteen studies reported knowledge, 44 attitudes, 29 experiences, and 36 barriers and facilitators of ACP. Asian HCPs addressed the essential role of families in ACP. They acknowledge the importance of ACP but rarely engage the patient in it. They considered ACP difficult to initiate, partly because of their lack of knowledge and skills in ACP, personal uneasiness to conduct ACP, fear of conflicts with family members and their legal consequences, and the lack of a standard system for ACP. Most studies indicated HCPs’ low engagement and late initiation of ACP. Conclusions and Implications: Despite acknowledging its importance, Asian HCPs felt that engaging in ACP is challenging. Capacity building for ACP in Asia should focus on culturally adapting ACP models concerning the essential role of the family in Asia, education for HCPs and the public, and providing institutional support for ACP. © 2020 AMDA – The Society for Post-Acute and Long-Term Care Medicine

Item Type: Article
Additional Information: Cited by: 64; All Open Access, Green Open Access, Hybrid Gold Open Access
Uncontrolled Keywords: Advance Care Planning; Advance Directives; Asia; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice; Health Personnel; Humans; adult; advance care planning; attitude; capacity building; education; Embase; English (language); fear; female; high income country; human; living will; male; Medline; narrative; review; risk assessment; skill; Southeast Asia; synthesis; systematic review; thematic analysis; Web of Science; Asia; attitude to health; health care personnel
Subjects: R Medicine > RB Biomedical Sciences
Divisions: Faculty of Medicine, Public Health and Nursing > Public Health and Nutrition
Depositing User: Sri JUNANDI
Date Deposited: 23 Sep 2024 03:03
Last Modified: 23 Sep 2024 03:03
URI: https://ir.lib.ugm.ac.id/id/eprint/4780

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item