Skip to main content
Erschienen in: BMC Palliative Care 1/2017

Open Access 01.12.2017 | Research article

Factors that influence advance directives completion amongst terminally ill patients at a tertiary hospital in Kenya

verfasst von: Stephen Omondi, John Weru, Asim Jamal Shaikh, Gerald Yonga

Erschienen in: BMC Palliative Care | Ausgabe 1/2017

Abstract

Background

An advance directive (AD) is a written or verbal document that legally stipulates a person’s health care preference while they are competent to make decisions for themselves and is used to guide decisions on life-sustaining treatment in the event that they become incapacitated. AD can take the form of a living will, a limitation of care document, a do-not-resuscitate order, or an appointment of a surrogate by durable power of attorney. The completion rate of AD varies from region to region, and it is influenced by multiple factors. The objectives of this study were to determine the proportion of terminally ill patients with AD and to identify the factors that influence the completion of AD amongst terminally ill patients at a tertiary hospital in Kenya.

Methods

The study was a retrospective survey. All available records of terminally ill patients seen at Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi, between July 2010 and December 2015, and that met the inclusion criteria were included in the study.

Results

In total, 216 records of terminally ill patients were analyzed: 89 records were of patients that had AD and 127 records were of patients that did not have AD. The proportion of terminally ill patients that had completed AD was 41.2%. The factors that were associated with the completion of AD on bivariate analysis were history of ICU admission, history of endotracheal intubation, functional status of the patient, the medical specialty taking care of the patient, patient’s caregiver discussing the AD with the patient, and a palliative specialist review. On multivariate regression analysis, discussion of AD with a caregiver and patient’s functional impairment were the factors with statistically significant association with completion of AD.

Conclusions

The proportion of terminally ill patients that had AD in their medical records was significant. However, most terminally ill patients did not have AD. Our data, perhaps the first on the subject in East Africa, suggest that most of the factors associated with AD completion mirrored those seen in other regions of the world. Discussion between patient and their physician and patient’s functional impairment were the factors independently associated with completion of AD. Therefore, physicians need to be aware of the importance of discussions of AD with their patients.

Background

Advance care planning for end of life is practiced in many parts of the world. It is a process that results in a written document, an advance directive (AD), which legally stipulates a person’s health care preference while they are competent to make decisions for themselves, and which is then used to guide decisions on life-sustaining treatment in the event that they become incapacitated.
The uptake of AD has been limited even in the countries where its use has existed for several years. The prevalence of AD in Australia was about 14% in one study, [1] and in a population in Canada, the prevalence of AD was 43.6% [2]. About a third of USA population have an AD [3]. At the hospital level, there is a low uptake in most branches of medicine other than oncology.
What is considered a good way to die differs from society to society [4]. The prevailing culture and the economic situation of a country determine the practice of end of life care in that country. Africa differs significantly from Western countries in terms of culture and economics. The factors that influence an individual’s uptake of AD are complex. They include patient, caregiver, legal, institutional, cultural, and religious factors, and while these factors may be similar between two societies, they do not have the same prevalence or contribute equally in each society.
In Western societies, where the factors that influence AD have been studied the most, the studies have been predominantly among elderly populations. Most of these studies have been prospective population-based surveys. Lovell et al., in a systematic review, summarize factors that determine AD use amongst palliative care patients. It revealed that older age, college education, diagnosis of cancer, being white, previous illnesses, an individual’s knowledge and attitude, a health care provider’s knowledge and attitude, availability of hospice care, specialist palliative care treatment, and laws on AD were positively correlated with signing an AD. While suffering from dementia, being African American, having dependent children, avoidance of acknowledging death and dying, concerns about AD resulting in withdrawal of care, and lack of facilitative laws were among the factors hindering uptake of AD [5]. Overall, advanced age and terminal illness were the most common reasons for completing AD.
Advance directives are hardly completed in Africa and little has been done on this subject. The relevance of AD in an environment with limited health care facilities, as is the case in most countries in Africa, may itself be questionable. In such a setting, most patients do not have a true choice on end of life care since life-sustaining treatment may not be available. One can, however, still make the opposite argument that available health resources in these countries should be directed where they would have the most impact, and that one way of doing that would be to promote uptake of AD. A study addressing the question of relevance of AD amongst five focus groups in South Africa found that AD was considered relevant by all five focus groups [6]. There have also been concerted efforts led by WHO to develop palliative care in Africa to take care of the increasing number of terminally ill cancer and HIV patients [7, 8].
In most African societies, discussion of death and dying is considered a taboo. Yet, it is frowned upon when an individual takes unilateral decisions on issues of dying. The decisions on end of life care are preferably deferred to family members or community elders [9]. In Kenya, for example, 68.2% of respondents in one study indicated they would like a relative to be involved in end of life decision making [10]. The study was a population-based survey of public preferences and priorities for end of life care in Kenya done in Nairobi and Western Kenya. It found that the majority, 61.4%, preferred quality of life over quantity, i.e., extending life. One’s own home was the most commonly (51.1%) preferred place to die [10].
Kenya does not have a law on AD, and where practiced, it is usually under institutional policy. At our hospital, the policy on end of life care was enacted in 2012. It offers guidance on when end of life care discussions should be initiated. It also provides suggestions to health care providers on the categories of patients that should be considered for end of life care discussions. Our hospital has a 280-bed capacity. It is a private tertiary level hospital that provides specialty training in internal medicine, pediatrics, obstetrics and gynecology, surgery, anesthesiology, radiology, anatomic pathology, and clinical pathology. The Internal Medicine department has several subspecialties – oncology, cardiology, infectious diseases, pulmonology, gastroenterology, nephrology, critical care, dermatology, neurology, hematology, endocrinology, rheumatology, psychiatry, and palliative care. The palliative care unit has one specialist doctor who heads a team of allied professionals.
The objectives of our study were to determine the proportion of terminally ill patients with AD and to identify the factors that influence AD completion at our hospital.

Methods

We conducted a retrospective survey using all available records of terminally ill patients seen at Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi, between July 2010 and December 2015, and that met the inclusion criteria of the study.
The process that was followed in identifying the files to include in the study is outlined in Fig. 1.
Terminal illness was defined as a disease that could not be cured or adequately treated and that was reasonably expected to result in the death of the patient within a short period, which was arbitrarily defined as within six months. A file that had records of a living will, a limitation of care document, a do-not-resuscitate order, or an appointment of surrogate by durable power of attorney for health care was considered to denote that the patient had completed AD.
We included only records of patients that were or above age 18 years and whose first and last consultations at our hospital were at least three months apart.
We excluded a record without a diagnosis, a record that was indeterminate for the definition of terminal illness, a record that had no dates of first and last consultations, or one that had more than 30% of the questionnaire variables missing.

Data management and analysis

Stata version 14.1 was used to analyze the data. Chi square test was used to analyze the relationship between proportions of categorical variables in the subjects that completed AD and in those who did not complete AD. Fisher’s exact test was used to examine the same categorical variables to take care of the small sample size. The factors found to be statistically significant in bivariate analysis were then subjected to multivariate regression analysis.

Results

The numbers of records that were found in the study are depicted in Fig. 1. The patients’ characteristics are depicted in Table 1. The diagnoses of study subjects are depicted in Table 2. The mean age of study subjects was 60.45 years; the median age was 63 years. The minimum and maximum ages were 19 years and 93 years, respectively. Figure 2 depicts a histogram of the patients ages.
Table 1
Patients’ Characteristics
Patients Characteristics
 
n
%
Age Group
  < 45 years
57
22.53
 45-65 years
88
34.78
  > 65 years
108
42.69
Gender
 Male
113
52.31
 Female
103
47.69
Nationality
 Kenyan
183
84.72
 Non-Kenyan
83
15.28
Ethnicity
 African
151
69.91
 Asian
48
22.22
 Caucasian
13
6.02
 Others
4
1.85
Marital Status
 Divorced
3
1.4
 Married
164
76.64
 Single
18
8.41
 Widowed
29
13.55
Parental Status
 A Parent
189
87.5
 Not a Parent
27
12.5
Education
 No formal Education
5
2.43
 Primary
17
7.94
 Secondary
25
11.68
 Tertiary
167
78.04
Socio-economic class
 Semi-skilled
27
12.74
 Unskilled
86
40.57
 Highly skilled
99
46.7
Religion
 Hindu
20
9.35
 Islam
37
17.29
 Judaism
1
0.49
 Protestant
140
65.42
 Catholic
15
7.01
 Others
1
0.47
Table 2
Diagnoses of subjects with and without AD
 
Patient with AD
Patient without AD
Oncology
 Brain Cancer
1
2
 Breast Cancer
16
16
 Esophageal Cancer
2
3
 Cervical Cancer
5
6
 Cholangiocarcinoma
3
8
 Colorectal Carcinoma
8
6
 Endometrial Cancer
2
1
 Gastric Cancer
8
1
 Hepatocellular Carcinoma
9
10
 Lung Cancer
8
6
 Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma
2
4
 Neuroendocrine Cancer
2
1
 Ovarian Cancer
2
0
 Pancreatic Cancer
4
1
 Prostate Cancer
3
8
Non-Oncology
 Advanced HIV
0
6
 End Stage Renal Disease
3
19
 Advanced Heart Failure
2
16
 Advanced Dementia
2
2
 Advanced Interstitial Lung Disease
3
4
 Advanced COPD
2
2
 Advanced Liver Cirrhosis
2
5
In total, 216 records of terminally ill patients met the inclusion criteria: 89 were of patients that had advance directives and 127 were of those that did not have advance directives. These proportions are depicted in Fig. 3.
The most common type of advance directives was a limitation of care document at 58.3%. Figure 4 depicts the types of AD that were completed by patients.
The proportion of terminally ill patients that had completed AD was 41.2%. The factors that were associated with completion of AD on bivariate analysis were history of ICU admission, history of endotracheal intubation, the functional status of the patient, the medical specialty taking care of the patient, a caregiver discussing the AD with the patient, and a palliative care specialist reviewing the patient. The results of bivariate analysis of the factors associated with AD completion are depicted in Table 3.
Table 3
Comparison of subjects with and without AD
 
n =216
Patients without AD (n = 89)
Patients without AD (n = 127)
 
%
n
%
n
%
P Value
Age Group
     
0.921
  < 45 years
21.3
19
21.35
27
21.26
 
 45-65 years
35.19
30
33.71
46
36.22
 
  > 65 years
43.52
40
44.94
54
45.52
 
Gender
     
0.903
 Female
47.69
42
47.19
61
48.73
 
 Male
52.31
47
52.81
66
51.97
 
Ethnicity
     
0.377
 African
69.91
67
75.28
84
66.14
 
 Asian
22.22
18
20.22
30
23.62
 
 Caucasian
6.02
3
3.37
10
7.87
 
 Others
1.85
1
1.12
3
2.36
 
Marital Status
     
0.313
 Divorced
1.4
1
1.12
2
1.6
 
 Married
76.64
67
75.28
97
77.6
 
 Single
8.41
11
12.36
7
5.6
 
 Widowed
13.55
10
11.24
19
15.2
 
Parental Status
     
0.715
 A Parent
87.5
77
86.52
112
88.19
 
 Not a Parent
12.5
12
13.48
15
11.81
 
Number of Children
     
0.779
 No Child
12.98
12
13.95
15
12.3
 
 1-5 Children
64.42
53
61.63
81
66.39
 
  ≥ 5 Children
22.6
21
24.43
26
21.31
 
Education
     
0.221
 No formal Education
2.43
4
4.49
1
0.8
 
 Primary
7.94
9
10.11
8
6.4
 
 secondary
11.68
9
10.11
16
12.8
 
 Tertiary
78.04
67
75.28
100
80
 
Socio-economic class
     
0.889
 Unskilled
40.57
38
42.7
48
39.02
 
 Semi-skilled
12.74
11
12.36
16
13.01
 
 highly skilled
46.7
40
44.94
59
47.97
 
Religion
     
0.189
 Hindu
9.35
4
4.55
16
12.7
 
 Islam
17.29
18
20.45
19
15.08
 
 Judaism
0.49
0
0
1
0.79
 
 Protestant
65.42
59
67.05
81
64.29
 
 Catholic
7.01
6
6.82
9
7.14
 
 Others
0.47
1
1.14
0
0
 
Insurance Status
     
0.295
 Has Health Insurance
61.35
57
65.52
70
58.33
 
 No Health Insurance
38.65
30
34.48
50
41.67
 
AD Discussion
     
<0.05
 Caregiver Discussed AD
48.15
82
92.13
22
17.32
 
 Caregiver didn’t Discuss AD
51.85
7
7.87
105
82.68
 
No. of Morbidities
     
0.25
 1 - 3 Morbidities
 
47
52.81
51
40.16
 
  > 3 Morbidities
38.43
28
31.46
55
43.31
 
Number of Admission
     
0.43
 1 - 3 Admissions
93.98
85
95.51
118
92.91
 
  > 3 Admissions
6.02
4
4.49
9
7.09
 
Specialty
     
<0.05
 Oncology
68.52
75
84.27
73
57.48
 
 Non-Oncology
31.48
14
15.73
54
42.52
 
History of Surgery
     
0.201
 History of Major Surgery
9.14
4
4.49
11
9.09
 
 No History of Major Surgery
92.86
85
9551
110
90.91
 
ICU Admission
     
<0.05
 Previous ICU Admission
40.47
20
22.47
69
53.17
 
 No Previous ICU Admission
59.53
67
77.53
59
46.83
 
Intubation History
     
<0.05
 Previous Intubation
34.42
17
19.1
57
45.24
 
 No Previous Intubation
65.52
72
80.9
69
54.76
 
Palliative Care Consult
     
<0.05
 Palliative Care Consult
54.88
71
80.68
47
37.01
 
 No Palliative Care Consult
45.12
17
19.88
80
62.99
 
Functional Status
     
<0.05
 Functional Impairment
83.33
82
92.13
98
77.17
 
 No Functional Impairment
16.67
7
7.87
29
22.83
 
Household Composition
     
0.186
 Lives alone
7.87
10
11.24
7
5.51
 
 Lives with Immediate Family
64.35
52
58.43
87
68.5
 
    Lives with Extended Family
27.78
27
30.34
33
25.58
 
On multivariate regression analysis, the discussion of AD with a caregiver and the patient’s functional impairment were the only factors with statistically significant association with completion of AD. The results of the multivariate analysis are depicted in Table 4.
Table 4
Multivariate analysis of factors associated with AD completion
 
RRRa
P Value
[95% Confidence Interval]
Caregiver discussed AD
40.56891
<0.05
15.05035
109.3554
Previous ICUb Admission
0.6650326
0.582
0.1558932
2.836996
Intubation history
0.4509578
0.304
0.0987241
2.059912
Palliative care consult
1.43966
0.474
0.5305328
3.906678
Functional Impairment
4.169589
0.021
1.243331
13.98298
Specialty
1.010565
0.986
0.3145422
3.246757
aRRR – Relative Risk Ratio
bICU – Intensive Care Unit
Sixty (67%) the of subjects who had completed AD had their wishes honored by the attending doctors.

Discussion

This study was a retrospective survey to determine the proportion of terminally ill patients that had completed AD and to determine the factors that were associated with AD completion.
We found that 41.2% of terminally ill patients had completed AD. Sittisombut et al. found even a higher completion rate (80%) amongst terminally ill patients in Thailand [11]. Both our study and Sittisombut’s looked at terminally ill patients, and this could explain why our studies had proportionally higher completion rate of AD compared to, for example, Mezey et al.’s study, in which only 20.4% had completed AD but which included both terminally ill and non-terminally ill patients [12]. The rate of AD completion in our study was not very high when compared to the rates of AD completion reported in the West. It can certainly be improved with better participation of the primary physicians.
Limitation of care documents and DNR orders were the most common type of AD completed in our study. There were only three living will documents completed. There was no single power of attorney by proxy documentation filled. Our findings contrast with those of the Alano et al. study where up to 85% of subjects had completed a living will [13]. The lower proportion of living will documents found in our study could be attributed to the lack of AD laws in our country, but cultural factors may also have played a role.
There was no significant association between ethnicity and completion of AD in our study. In the USA, African-Americans and other minority ethnic groups were less likely to have AD compared to the Caucasians [14]. In our study the majority of patients were African (69.92%) followed by Asians (22.22%). Caucasians constituted only 6.02% of patients. Completion of AD is known to be generally higher amongst Caucasians, and they were under-represented in our study. In addition, a pertinent point to note is that our hospital is mostly patronized by well-educated, high and middle class clients, irrespective of their ethnicity. The homogenous socio-economic status of our patients could thus be the reason an association between ethnicity and AD completion was not seen in our study.
Many patients learn about advance directives for the first time from their doctor. Therefore, promoting physicians’ understanding of AD is one way of promoting the uptake of AD [15]. Similar to the positive association between caregivers discussing AD with their patients and completion of AD that was found in this study, Walker et al. found that after controlling for demographic and clinical confounders, physicians had the most important role in determining uptake of AD. Palliative care includes advance care planning as one of the services offered, and it is expected, as was seen in this study, that a palliative care specialist consultation would be associated with a higher completion rate of AD. Therefore, health institutional policies and protocols that ensure attending physicians discuss AD with all terminally ill patients have great potential to improve completion rates.
Moody et al. found functional impairment to be correlated with completion of AD [16]. We similarly found that the degree of functional impairment as measured by the Karnofsky performance scale index was positively associated with completion of AD. In interview-based studies in the United states, when patients were asked what factors influenced them to complete AD, functional impairment, loss of independence, previous experiences with critical care, or experiencing a friend or relative undergo a prolonged admission in critical care were some of the factors mentioned [12, 17]. In our study, we found a similar association between completion of AD and history of critical care admission or endotracheal intubation. We did not, however, find an association between completion of AD and the number of comorbidities, the number of hospital admissions, or the history of major surgery, all of which have been found to be positively correlated with AD completion in other studies.
Lovell et al., in a systematic review of factors that influence AD completion amongst palliative care patients, reported that history of malignancy was positively correlated with completion of AD. They also reported that diagnoses of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) and dementia were negatively correlated with completion of AD [5]. Butler el al found that most heart failure patients did not have AD documented in their files [18]. In our study, there was no independent association found between a diagnosis of malignancy and AD completion, but as was found in the Butler et al. study, there was a negative association between a heart disease diagnosis and completion of AD.
In our study, only six (2.78%) patients had HIV, and none of them had completed AD. All of them had well-controlled disease. Barocas et al. studied AD completion amongst people living with HIV and found that only a quarter of people living with HIV had completed AD. The factors associated with AD completion in their study were diagnosis of AIDS, neurological, cardiovascular, chronic kidney disease, or malignancy. They made the point that since HIV had become a chronic disease and patients were more likely to die from other comorbid conditions, opportunities were being missed to complete AD in this population.
The mean age in our study was 60.45 years. There was no association of age with completion of AD in our study. The mean age in Sittisombut et al. study was 57.5 years. The mean age in Mezey et al. study was 52 years. In the Sittisombut et al. study, most subjects were above age 60 years. They did not, however, report the association of age with AD completion. In the studies done in the Western countries, advanced age is an important determinant of AD completion [2, 19]. These studies were however not among terminally ill patients. It is possible that a diagnosis of terminal illness eliminates the influence of advanced age in AD completion.
We did not find an association between parental status and AD completion. Neither was there an association between the number of children a subject had and completion of AD. Nilsson et al. found a positive correlation between having dependent children and completion of AD [20]. Most of our subjects were married, but there was no association between marital status and AD completion. It is not clear why family dynamics as reflected by the factors mentioned here had no association with AD completion. It could be because of the small sample size. For example, very few subjects in our study lived alone.
One’s occupation type or whether they had medical insurance did not have an association with completion of AD in our study. One of the barriers to completion of AD found among the African-Americans was lower socioeconomic status [21]. In a hospital based study, Mezey et al. found a positive correlation between one’s salary and one’s health insurance status with completion of AD [12]. The association between AD completion and cost may not have been found in our study because it was done in a tertiary private hospital where most patients had health insurance.
Most of the subjects in our study were non-Catholic Christians (65.42%) or Muslims (17.29%). There was, however, no significant association found between religion and completion of AD.
The proportions of males and females in our study were 52.31% and 47.69%, respectively. Perkin’s et al. addressed the role of gender in completion of AD. They found that men preferred death over futile care, and that men addressed only the functional aspects of end of life care. This contrasted with women who addressed other aspects as well [22]. In our study, there was no significant difference between proportions of males and females who completed AD.
The majority of patients in our study had obtained tertiary level education (78.04%). The proportion of patients with tertiary education was higher in the people who did not complete advance directives (80%) compared to those who had completed (75.28%). However, education level attained did not have a statistically significant association with completion of AD in our study. Mezey et al. found education to be the most important factor in determining uptake of AD [12]. In another hospital-based study in Thailand, Sittisombut et al. the majority of patients had attained grade 4–6 level of education, with only about one third having attained above grade 9 level education. In their study, as was in ours, there was no correlation between education and completion of AD [11]. One reason why our results are similar to Sittisombut’s could be the fact that in both studies the decisions to complete AD were made in most cases by the patient after discussions with their family, as opposed to an individualistic approach to AD completion.
There are patient factors associated with AD such as knowledge and attitude of patients that we could not study due to the retrospective nature of our study. There are also aspects of patient-physician relationship important for AD completion that we could not study. The role played by lack of laws on AD in Kenya could also not be studied. The influence of patients’ relatives in influencing AD could also not be studied.
Due to the retrospective nature of our study, we could not focus on the role of religion and spirituality, patients’ preexisting knowledge about advanced directives, patient-physician relationship, and influence of the relatives on decision making. However, all these factors are known to play a role in AD completion [23] [24].
Despite these limitations, our study shows that the factors associated with AD in Kenya are not different from those reported in the studies done in Western countries. It also re-demonstates the important role played by physicians in promoting AD use. Despite reporting from a developing country, our study demonstrates good uptake of AD in our hospital amongst terminally ill patients.

Conclusion

The proportion of terminally ill patients that had AD in their medical records was significant, however, most terminally ill patients did not have AD. Most of the factors associated with AD completion were the same as those seen in other regions of the world. Among them, discussion between a patient and their physician and functional impairment of the patient were the factors independently associated with completion of AD. We conclude that physician involvement and early discussion with the patients are key components associated with AD completion. Similar but larger studies, done prospectively and incorporating patients from public hospitals, could identify other factors that could be improved to enhance completions of AD in our population. However, some factors known to influence AD completion in the United States of America and Western European countries such as age did not have a correlation with AD in our study, perhaps reflecting a relatively younger population in our setup.
To improve uptake of AD in our setting, we should encourage more physician - patient discussion as this was the main modifiable influence of AD uptake in our setting.

Acknowledgments

We wish to acknowledge Dr. Mary Kaniu who assisted with data collection and Ms Sandra Obaje who proofread the final manuscript. Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi, provided $50 for purchase of stationery that was used in this study.

Funding

Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi, provided $50 for purchase of stationery that was used in this study. They did not take part in or influence the study design, data collection and analysis, and drafting of the manuscript.

Availability of data and materials

The datasets used and/or analyzed during the current study available from the corresponding author and from the Dean’s office, Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi, on reasonable request.

Authors’ contributions

This paper was part of my dissertation work for a Master’s degree in Internal Medicine. My co-authors were my supervisors. GY was my methodology supervisor, while AJ and JW were my content supervisors. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Competing interests

The authors declare that they have no competing interests.
Not applicable.
We obtained exemption from hospital ethical approval committee because this study was not to identify any subject by name and was not to contact any subjects in person. The need to obtain consent from patients or their relatives for patients’ data to be used in this study was also waived by the Aga Khan University Hospital, Nairobi, ethical committee because this study was not to identify any subject by name and was not to contact any subjects.
Open AccessThis article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://​creativecommons.​org/​licenses/​by/​4.​0/​), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided you give appropriate credit to the original author(s) and the source, provide a link to the Creative Commons license, and indicate if changes were made. The Creative Commons Public Domain Dedication waiver (http://​creativecommons.​org/​publicdomain/​zero/​1.​0/​) applies to the data made available in this article, unless otherwise stated.
Literatur
1.
Zurück zum Zitat White B, Tilse C, Wilson J, Rosenman L, Strub T, Feeney R, Silvester W. Prevalence and predictors of advance directives in Australia. Intern Med J. 2014;44(10):975–80.CrossRefPubMed White B, Tilse C, Wilson J, Rosenman L, Strub T, Feeney R, Silvester W. Prevalence and predictors of advance directives in Australia. Intern Med J. 2014;44(10):975–80.CrossRefPubMed
2.
Zurück zum Zitat Wilson DM, Houttekier D, Kunju SA, Birch S, Cohen J, MacLeod R, Hewitt JA. A population-based study on advance directive completion and completion intention among citizens of the western Canadian province of Alberta. J Palliat Care. 2013;29(1):5–12.PubMed Wilson DM, Houttekier D, Kunju SA, Birch S, Cohen J, MacLeod R, Hewitt JA. A population-based study on advance directive completion and completion intention among citizens of the western Canadian province of Alberta. J Palliat Care. 2013;29(1):5–12.PubMed
3.
Zurück zum Zitat Jackson JM, Rolnick SJ, Asche SE, Heinrich RL. Knowledge, attitudes, and preferences regarding advance directives among patients of a managed care organization. Am J Manag Care. 2009;15(3):177–86.PubMed Jackson JM, Rolnick SJ, Asche SE, Heinrich RL. Knowledge, attitudes, and preferences regarding advance directives among patients of a managed care organization. Am J Manag Care. 2009;15(3):177–86.PubMed
4.
Zurück zum Zitat Walter T. Historical and cultural variants on the good death. BMJ [Br Med J]. 2003;327(7408):218–20.CrossRef Walter T. Historical and cultural variants on the good death. BMJ [Br Med J]. 2003;327(7408):218–20.CrossRef
5.
Zurück zum Zitat Lovell A, Yates P. Advance care planning in palliative care: a systematic literature review of the contextual factors influencing its uptake 2008–2012. Palliat Med. 2014;28(8):1026–35.CrossRefPubMed Lovell A, Yates P. Advance care planning in palliative care: a systematic literature review of the contextual factors influencing its uptake 2008–2012. Palliat Med. 2014;28(8):1026–35.CrossRefPubMed
6.
Zurück zum Zitat Stanford J, Sandberg DM, Gwyther L, Harding R. Conversations worth having: the perceived relevance of advance care planning among teachers, hospice staff, and pastors in knysna, south africa. J Palliat Med. 2013;16(7):762–7.CrossRefPubMed Stanford J, Sandberg DM, Gwyther L, Harding R. Conversations worth having: the perceived relevance of advance care planning among teachers, hospice staff, and pastors in knysna, south africa. J Palliat Med. 2013;16(7):762–7.CrossRefPubMed
7.
Zurück zum Zitat Harding R, Higginson IJ. Palliative care in sub-Saharan africa. Lancet. 2005;365(9475):1971–7.CrossRefPubMed Harding R, Higginson IJ. Palliative care in sub-Saharan africa. Lancet. 2005;365(9475):1971–7.CrossRefPubMed
8.
Zurück zum Zitat Harding R, Selman L, Powell RA, Namisango E, Downing J, Merriman A, Ali Z, Gikaara N, Gwyther L, Higginson I. Research into palliative care in sub-Saharan africa. Lancet Oncol. 2013;14(4):e183–188.CrossRefPubMed Harding R, Selman L, Powell RA, Namisango E, Downing J, Merriman A, Ali Z, Gikaara N, Gwyther L, Higginson I. Research into palliative care in sub-Saharan africa. Lancet Oncol. 2013;14(4):e183–188.CrossRefPubMed
9.
Zurück zum Zitat Voltz R, Akabayashi A, Reese C, Ohi G, Sass HM. End-of-life decisions and advance directives in palliative care: a cross-cultural survey of patients and health-care professionals. J Pain Symptom Manag. 1998;16(3):153–62.CrossRef Voltz R, Akabayashi A, Reese C, Ohi G, Sass HM. End-of-life decisions and advance directives in palliative care: a cross-cultural survey of patients and health-care professionals. J Pain Symptom Manag. 1998;16(3):153–62.CrossRef
10.
Zurück zum Zitat Downing J, Gomes B, Gikaara N, Munene G, Daveson BA, Powell RA, Mwangi-Powell FN, Higginson IJ, Harding R. Public preferences and priorities for end-of-life care in Kenya: a population-based street survey. BMC Palliat Care. 2014;13(1):4.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral Downing J, Gomes B, Gikaara N, Munene G, Daveson BA, Powell RA, Mwangi-Powell FN, Higginson IJ, Harding R. Public preferences and priorities for end-of-life care in Kenya: a population-based street survey. BMC Palliat Care. 2014;13(1):4.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral
11.
Zurück zum Zitat Sittisombut S, Maxwell C, Love EJ, Sitthi-Amorn C. Effectiveness of advance directives for the care of terminally ill patients in Chiang Mai university hospital, Thailand. Nurs Health Sci. 2008;10(1):37–42.CrossRefPubMed Sittisombut S, Maxwell C, Love EJ, Sitthi-Amorn C. Effectiveness of advance directives for the care of terminally ill patients in Chiang Mai university hospital, Thailand. Nurs Health Sci. 2008;10(1):37–42.CrossRefPubMed
12.
Zurück zum Zitat Mezey MD, Leitman R, Mitty EL, Bottrell MM, Ramsey GC. Why hospital patients do and do not execute an advance directive. Nurs Outlook. 2000;48(4):165–71.CrossRefPubMed Mezey MD, Leitman R, Mitty EL, Bottrell MM, Ramsey GC. Why hospital patients do and do not execute an advance directive. Nurs Outlook. 2000;48(4):165–71.CrossRefPubMed
13.
Zurück zum Zitat Alano GJ, Pekmezaris R, Tai JY, Hussain MJ, Jeune J, Louis B, El-Kass G, Ashraf MS, Reddy R, Lesser M, et al. Factors influencing older adults to complete advance directives. Palliat Support Care. 2010;8(03):267–75.CrossRefPubMed Alano GJ, Pekmezaris R, Tai JY, Hussain MJ, Jeune J, Louis B, El-Kass G, Ashraf MS, Reddy R, Lesser M, et al. Factors influencing older adults to complete advance directives. Palliat Support Care. 2010;8(03):267–75.CrossRefPubMed
14.
Zurück zum Zitat Rhodes RL, Batchelor K, Lee SC, Halm EA. Barriers to end-of-life care for African americans from the providers’ perspective: opportunity for intervention development. Am J Hosp Palliat Care. 2015;32(2):137–43.CrossRefPubMed Rhodes RL, Batchelor K, Lee SC, Halm EA. Barriers to end-of-life care for African americans from the providers’ perspective: opportunity for intervention development. Am J Hosp Palliat Care. 2015;32(2):137–43.CrossRefPubMed
15.
Zurück zum Zitat Johnston SC, Pfeifer MP, McNutt R. The discussion about advance directives. Patient and physician opinions regarding when and how it should be conducted. End of life study group. Arch Intern Med. 1995;155(10):1025–30.CrossRefPubMed Johnston SC, Pfeifer MP, McNutt R. The discussion about advance directives. Patient and physician opinions regarding when and how it should be conducted. End of life study group. Arch Intern Med. 1995;155(10):1025–30.CrossRefPubMed
16.
Zurück zum Zitat Moody LE, Small BJ, Jones CB. Advance directives preferences of functionally and cognitively impaired nursing home residents in the united states. J Appl Gerontol. 2002;21(1):103–18.CrossRef Moody LE, Small BJ, Jones CB. Advance directives preferences of functionally and cognitively impaired nursing home residents in the united states. J Appl Gerontol. 2002;21(1):103–18.CrossRef
17.
Zurück zum Zitat Cugliari A, Miller T, Sobal J. FActors promoting completion of advance directives in the hospital. Arch Intern Med. 1995;155(17):1893–8.CrossRefPubMed Cugliari A, Miller T, Sobal J. FActors promoting completion of advance directives in the hospital. Arch Intern Med. 1995;155(17):1893–8.CrossRefPubMed
18.
Zurück zum Zitat Butler J, Binney Z, Kalogeropoulos A, Owen M, Clevenger C, Gunter D, Georgiopoulou V, Quest T. Advance directives among hospitalized patients with heart failure. JACC Heart Fail. 2015;3(2):112–21.CrossRefPubMed Butler J, Binney Z, Kalogeropoulos A, Owen M, Clevenger C, Gunter D, Georgiopoulou V, Quest T. Advance directives among hospitalized patients with heart failure. JACC Heart Fail. 2015;3(2):112–21.CrossRefPubMed
19.
Zurück zum Zitat Gordon NP, Shade SB. Advance directives are more likely among seniors asked about end-of-life care preferences. Arch Intern Med. 1999;159(7):701–4.CrossRefPubMed Gordon NP, Shade SB. Advance directives are more likely among seniors asked about end-of-life care preferences. Arch Intern Med. 1999;159(7):701–4.CrossRefPubMed
20.
Zurück zum Zitat Nilsson ME, Maciejewski PK, Zhang B, Wright AA, Trice ED, Muriel AC, Friedlander RJ, Fasciano KM, Block SD, Prigerson HG. Mental health, treatment preferences, advance care planning, location, and quality of death in advanced cancer patients with dependent children. Cancer. 2009;115(2):399–409.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral Nilsson ME, Maciejewski PK, Zhang B, Wright AA, Trice ED, Muriel AC, Friedlander RJ, Fasciano KM, Block SD, Prigerson HG. Mental health, treatment preferences, advance care planning, location, and quality of death in advanced cancer patients with dependent children. Cancer. 2009;115(2):399–409.CrossRefPubMedPubMedCentral
21.
Zurück zum Zitat West SK, Hollis M. Barriers to completion of advance care directives among African americans ages 25–84: a cross-generational study. Omega. 2012;65(2):125–37.PubMed West SK, Hollis M. Barriers to completion of advance care directives among African americans ages 25–84: a cross-generational study. Omega. 2012;65(2):125–37.PubMed
22.
Zurück zum Zitat Perkins HS, Cortez JD, Hazuda HP. Advance care planning: does patient gender make a difference? Am J Med Sci. 2004;327(1):25–32.CrossRefPubMed Perkins HS, Cortez JD, Hazuda HP. Advance care planning: does patient gender make a difference? Am J Med Sci. 2004;327(1):25–32.CrossRefPubMed
24.
Zurück zum Zitat Karches KE, Chung GS, Arora V, Meltzer DO, Curlin FA. Religiosity, spirituality, and end-of-life planning: a single-site survey of medical inpatients. J Pain Symptom Manag. 2012;44(6):843–51.CrossRef Karches KE, Chung GS, Arora V, Meltzer DO, Curlin FA. Religiosity, spirituality, and end-of-life planning: a single-site survey of medical inpatients. J Pain Symptom Manag. 2012;44(6):843–51.CrossRef
Metadaten
Titel
Factors that influence advance directives completion amongst terminally ill patients at a tertiary hospital in Kenya
verfasst von
Stephen Omondi
John Weru
Asim Jamal Shaikh
Gerald Yonga
Publikationsdatum
01.12.2017
Verlag
BioMed Central
Erschienen in
BMC Palliative Care / Ausgabe 1/2017
Elektronische ISSN: 1472-684X
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12904-017-0186-z

Weitere Artikel der Ausgabe 1/2017

BMC Palliative Care 1/2017 Zur Ausgabe

Update AINS

Bestellen Sie unseren Fach-Newsletter und bleiben Sie gut informiert.