Advance Care Planning Clinical Trial
Official title:
I Kua na'u "Let Me Carry Out Your Last Wishes" Advance Care Planning for Native Hawaiian Elders - Trial Phase
Communication surrounding serious illness decision making is formalized in Advance Care Planning (ACP), a process involving verbal or written information designed to inform patients of possible medical options including palliative and hospice care services. Numerous studies have suggested that improved ACP rates better align health care delivery with patient preferences. Despite expansion of ACP services in the health care system, Native Hawaiians (NHs) consistently have negligible rates of ACP and low use of palliative and hospice care services. To address these shortcomings, our multi-disciplinary community and research group has partnered to create the I kua na'u "Let Me Carry Out Your Last Wishes" ACP video intervention. Our Community-Based Collaborative Approach will create, develop and test the I kua na'u comprehensive video-based ACP program honoring the history, opinions, and culture of NHs. Indeed, NH culture is primarily an oral tradition in which the spoken word permeates the life of NHs and is the normal way of interacting with neighbors, including in its most recent adaptation with the use of video media. The I kua na'u program will include videos tailored for the different settings in which older NHs live and get medical care. The videos will explain the importance of ACP, empower NHs to tell their story ('olelo Kama'ilio; "Talk Story") by allowing the recording of personal video declarations of ACP wishes, and the ability to share the personal video declaration with family, friends and clinicians. The overall objective is to conduct a five-year program that includes two years of development of the I kua na'u ACP video program with focus group testing, and then three years of implementation in the NH community. Demonstrating the effectiveness of using the video program in NHs represents an essential step to implement this tool in practice. The Specific Aim is to compare the ACP engagement, knowledge, decisional conflict, and ACP completion rates in 220 NHs over the age of 55 in: (a) a pre-post study design in 110 people living on Homestead or Assisted Living using the video intervention, and (b) a randomized trial of 110 people recruited from Ambulatory Clinics.
This project entitled, "I kua na'u" in Hawaiian, translates to "Let me carry out your last wishes." This work aims to honor the Native Hawaiian (NH) sense of cultural context for initiating a conversation between elders and their families through a video intervention to promote Advance Care Planning (ACP) in a manner that respectfully communicates the personal preferences of NH elders to their family, caregivers and the health care system. The full I kua na'u program will examine a video enhanced intervention designed by and for Native Hawaiians (NH) and their family caregivers in three distinct settings: 1) NH Homesteads, 2) Assisted Living, and 3) Ambulatory Clinics. The overall objective of the present proposal is to conduct the first phase of the program, which covers the planned two year development period of the I kua na'u ACP video program. During this time, we will conduct a series of focus groups and one-on-one stakeholder interviews to inform the creation of: A) NH ACP videos; B) a NH personal video declaration process; and, C) NH community members training program to deliver the intervention. Native Hawaiians (NHs), the indigenous people of Hawai'i, comprise a diverse population of more than 500,000 individuals living in the US and are one of the fastest growing racial/ethnic groups in the country. The highest concentration (55%) of NHs live in the State of Hawai'i, the ancestral home of all NH people. Several studies have established a higher mortality rate among NHs that occurs at an age 10-15 years earlier than the general US population. A recent study found that NHs had the lowest life expectancy of the five major ethnic groups in the state of Hawai'i, with a consistent 10-year gap between NHs and the longest living ethnic group. According to the US Census 2010, ~100,000 NHs over the age of 50 currently live in the US with 60% residing in the State of Hawai'i. Yet few studies have examined the use of end-of-life care and advance care planning in NHs who are at high risk for more frequent and earlier age death. Thus, this proposal aims to fill the gap in our understanding of ACP among NH elders and will develop, test and disseminate a culturally informed intervention to improve ACP practices among NH elders and their families. Mounting evidence suggests that NHs rarely participate in ACP or communicate their ACP wishes to their families, who are often the primary caregivers. Palliative care and hospice services have been associated with less intensive interventions at the end of life, possibly due to improved communication and decision making. Learning about ACP and communicating with family and providers is the best way for a person to get health care that is concordant with one's wishes and values. NHs represent a unique population with distinct cultural, epidemiological, genetic, and psychosocial characteristics. Evidence suggests that they also have distinct health care and health communication preferences. Although some of these distinct features and preferences may contribute to disparities in health care for NHs with advanced illness, these disparities may also be due to identified health communication gaps. While the topic of ACP communication specifically is understudied, critical health communication gaps exist for many NHs. Previous research by members of this study team and others have identified relevant health communication challenges in NH communities. For instance, practical challenges included jargon and lack of plain English. Interpersonal issues included doctors rushing, doctors not assessing comprehension, and doctors not treating respondents as people. Respondents noted that they would often not ask questions even when they knew they did not understand because they did not want the provider to think negatively of them. Overarching themes to improve communication gaps included: the importance of family and community in health information dissemination, the importance of personal experience and relationships to the salience of health information, and the desire for local cultural relevance in health communication. ACP seeks to ensure that patients receive medical care consistent with their values, goals and preferences during the advanced stages of a disease when they no longer have capacity to make decisions. ACP is the most consistent factor associated with better end-of-life outcomes in patients with advanced illness and their caregivers. The lack of ACP is associated with more aggressive interventions, more terminal hospitalizations, lower hospice use, and worse caregiver burden and family bereavement outcomes. Unfortunately, ACP completion remains inadequate, and has remained consistently low. Studies show that traditional written and verbal ACP does not effectively inform many patients and caregivers, and often occurs late in the disease process, which is especially true in vulnerable communities such as NHs. Other common barriers to ACP include lack of tailoring for NHs, variable quality of clinician communication, complex relationships between families and clinicians regarding decision making, and the inability for patients to realistically envision accurate future health states. These barriers present challenges as well as an opportunity. This opportunity for change is a major goal of this proposal to evaluate not just an intervention and its meaningfulness to individuals, caretakers, and family, but also, to educate and train our communities on how to deploy the intervention in real world settings. Individuals from our NH communities will be trained to carry out the intervention and to implement this training using our community peer-to-peer model. ;
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