Breast Neoplasms Clinical Trial
Official title:
End-of-Life Care for African Americans: Intervention Design and Implementation
Racial differences in health care are documented across the health care continuum and persist in aging and end-of-life (EOL) care. African Americans (AA) and other underrepresented minorities often choose more aggressive therapies at the end of life and are less likely to utilize hospice care in the terminal stages of their illness. Potential reasons for these disparities include: lack of knowledge of and misperceptions about palliative and hospice care, spiritual beliefs, and mistrust in the health care system, among others. Despite the literature on disparities in end-of-life (EOL) care and reasons for underuse and the presence of national EOL care guidelines, attempts to address this problem have been limited and often not rigorously evaluated. The majority of interventions to promote EOL care were done in majority populations and focused predominantly on trying to change physician awareness of patient's pain, symptoms, and values or to change physician communication behavior. While these early studies made tremendous contributions to the study of EOL care and the needs of the terminally ill, the interventions associated with these studies did not reach their desired effectiveness. The investigators propose a different strategy that would focus specifically on previously identified barriers to utilization of advance directives, palliative care, and hospice care among African Americans - including physicians' difficulty and discomfort with prognostication, AA patients' knowledge, attitudes and beliefs towards hospice and palliative care, conflict between patients' spiritual beliefs and the general hospice and palliative medicine philosophy of care, and medical mistrust. The goal of this project is to improve methods of prognostication for physicians and increase awareness of EOL care options for AAs. To overcome the dual challenges of physicians' reluctance to discuss EOL care and patients' discomfort in engaging in such conversations, the investigators will use the electronic medical record (EMR) to automatically identify AA patients with life-limiting illness who are eligible for counseling about EOL care options. To change knowledge and attitudes toward EOL care options among AA patients, the investigators will design a culturally sensitive intervention that will combine multimedia materials and a culturally concordant lay health advisor who will deliver tailored education and counseling.
Aim 1:
A. We will conduct semi-structured interviews with patient/caregiver pairs and focus groups
with providers that will test the communication strategies of available audiovisual materials
and materials that we will develop for the intervention. The audiovisual segments will be
taken from an available EOL care educational digital versatile disc (DVD). We aim to
interview 12 patients and their caregivers, or more until thematic saturation is reached. We
will obtain informed consent, and all interviews will be audiotaped and transcribed.
Interviews will be conducted separately, and will last 30 to 45 minutes.
B. Two focus groups will be conducted with palliative care providers to identify
communication strategies they use with AAs. One will be conducted with providers from
Parkland Hospital. The other will be conducted with providers from University Hospitals, the
Dallas VA, and Baylor University Medical Center in Dallas. Informed consent will be obtained.
All sessions will be audiotaped and transcribed. The focus groups will last 45 to 60 minutes.
C. We will create additional DVD segments that will address previously identified barriers to
EOL care for AAs, including: 1) spiritual/religious conflict, and 2) medical mistrust. We
will obtain feedback on the newly developed segments from 10 new patient/caregiver dyads
(semi-structured interviews) and 6 to 8 AA religious leaders (focus group) recruited from
local churches. Informed consent will be obtained prior to conducting the interviews and
focus groups. All will last 30 to 60 minutes.
D. A lay health advisor (LHA) will be recruited from the community to provide counsel about
EOL care to patients who will receive the intervention. The LHA and the PI of the project
will undergo training in how to provide culturally sensitive EOL care for AAs via the APPEAL
(A Progressive Palliative Care Educational Curriculum for the Care of AAs at Life's End)
Curriculum created at Duke University. After training, the LHA will participate in in-service
work with the Parkland Palliative Care Team and the PI.
Aim 2:
We will use an e-EOL algorithm to identify AA patients hospitalized at Parkland who have
advanced breast, lung, and colorectal cancer to identify potentially eligible candidates for
the intervention utilizing EMR data from Parkland Hospital (See Aim 1 eligibility criteria).
Once eligibility is confirmed the LHA will introduce the study to the patient and obtain
informed consent. Each patient will be asked to identify a primary caregiver that will be
able to participate in the intervention. The LHA will contact the patients' primary
caregivers to confirm participation in the study and arrange a time to meet with both the
patient and caregiver to conduct the intervention. We anticipate that 24 patient-caregiver
pairs will receive the intervention (8 for each type of cancer).
The LHA will meet with eligible patients and caregivers and assist them in watching the
developed DVD segments. Afterward, the LHA will answer questions and provide additional
information. They will tailor the discussion to the patient's values, preferences, concerns,
and clinical circumstances.
The primary process outcome tested will be the feasibility and acceptability of the
intervention. Feasibility success will be measured by the number and rates of
patients/caregivers who complete the intervention and follow-up interviews. The primary
decision-making outcome is change in intent to discuss EOL care options based on the
Transtheoretical Stages of Change Model (i.e., pre-contemplation, contemplation, preparation,
and action). Secondary outcomes measured will include: knowledge of prognosis and EOL care
options, decisional conflict, quality of life, and health care utilization. Other patient and
treatment variables will also be collected, per the study protocol.
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