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Canadian outpatients and advance directives: poor knowledge and little experience but positive attitudes.

机译:加拿大的门诊病人和预先指示:知识不足经验不足但态度积极。

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摘要

OBJECTIVE: To examine the knowledge of, previous experience with, attitudes toward and perceived barriers to completing advance directives among outpatients at two general medicine clinics. DESIGN: Cross-sectional questionnaire administered in face-to-face structured interviews. SETTING: General internal-medicine outpatient clinics at a university teaching hospital. PATIENTS: One hundred and five adult outpatients who could communicate in spoken English and who consented to be interviewed. RESULTS: Of 167 patients approached, 58 were excluded because they could not communicate in spoken English, and 4 refused to participate. Of the remaining 105 patients, 17 (16%) knew about living wills, 12 (11%) about durable powers of attorney for health care and 4 (4%) about advance directives. Twenty-three (22%) had thought about their preferences for life-sustaining treatment, 20 (19%) had discussed them, none had written them down, and 45 (43%) had thought about choosing a proxy. Sixty-one (58%) wanted to think about their preferences for treatment, 65 (62%) wanted to discuss them, 32 (30%) wanted to write them down, and 80 (76%) wanted to choose a proxy. The perceived barriers to completing an advance directive were inability to write, the belief that an advance directive was unnecessary, a fatalistic attitude, previous discussion of preferences, a desire to leave the decision to doctors, uncertainty about preferences, a desire to discuss preferences rather than document them, a desire to wait until the situation arose, a desire to write down preferences in the future and a desire to avoid thinking about preferences or advance directives. Respondents with more knowledge of life-sustaining treatments were more likely to want to complete an advance directive. CONCLUSIONS: Outpatients have positive attitudes toward advance directives, but their knowledge and experience are limited. These data underscore the need for patient education and for policies to eliminate the barriers to completing advance directives that patients face.
机译:目的:研究两家普通科门诊患者在完成门诊指示方面的知识,以前的经验,态度和感知障碍。设计:在面对面的结构化访谈中管理的横断面问卷。地点:一所大学教学医院的普通内科门诊。患者:一百零五名可以用英语进行交流并同意接受采访的成人门诊病人。结果:在167名患者中,有58名患者因为无法使用英语进行交流而被排除在外,还有4名患者拒绝参加。在其余的105位患者中,有17位(16%)知道生前遗嘱,有12位(11%)知道有持久的卫生保健委托书,有4位(4%)知道预先指示。 23(22%)曾考虑过他们对维持生命治疗的偏好,20(19%)曾讨论过,没有写下来,45(43%)曾考虑过选择代理人。六十一(58%)想考虑他们对治疗的偏好,65(62%)想讨论他们,32(30%)想写下来,80(76%)想选择代理。难以完成预设医疗指示的障碍包括无法撰写,相信不必要的预设医疗指示,宿命态度,先前对偏好的讨论,将决定留给医生的意愿,对偏好的不确定性,更愿意讨论偏好的愿望而不是记录下来,渴望等到情况出现后,渴望在将来写下偏好,并避免考虑偏好或预先指示。对维持生命的治疗有更多了解的受访者更可能希望完成预先医疗指示。结论:门诊患者对预先医疗指示持积极态度,但他们的知识和经验有限。这些数据强调了对患者进行教育的必要性,以及消除消除患者完成预先指示的障碍的政策的需求。

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