Barriers to initiate a discussion about advance care planning among older Taiwanese residents of nursing homes and their families: A qualitative study

In Taiwan, the Patients' Right to Autonomy Act was enacted in 2019. However, advance care planning (ACP) implementation rates remain low in long-term care facilities. Aim: This study explored the barriers to initiate a discussion about ACP among older Taiwanese residents of nursing homes and th...

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Published inApplied nursing research Vol. 75; p. 151766
Main Authors Lee, Hsin-Tzu Sophie, Yang, Chia-Ling, Leu, Sei-Ven, Hu, Wen-Yu
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.02.2024
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Summary:In Taiwan, the Patients' Right to Autonomy Act was enacted in 2019. However, advance care planning (ACP) implementation rates remain low in long-term care facilities. Aim: This study explored the barriers to initiate a discussion about ACP among older Taiwanese residents of nursing homes and their families. A descriptive qualitative design was used. Face-to-face interviews were individually conducted with 38 participants (residents: 18; family members: 20), and data were analyzed through content analysis. Five themes were identified: (1) having cultural or spiritual concerns (both groups), (2) prioritizing the bigger picture (family) (both groups), (3) waiting for the right time (both groups), (4) feeling unsure (residents), and (5) following the pace of the residents (family members). The results indicate that discussing ACP with Chinese people and their families clashes with traditional Chinese culture. To implement ACP in long-term care facilities based in regions with ethnically Chinese populations, medical professionals must ensure that the residents and their family members understand advance directives and their role in ensuring a good death and must act as a bridge between residents and their family members to assist them in making consensual end-of-life-care decisions with residents. [Display omitted] •Long-term care facilities (LTCFs) in Taiwan lack advance care planning (ACP).•LTCF residents and their families avoid initiating in ACP conversation.•ACP implementation is poor in LTCFs in regions with ethnic Chinese populations.•Traditional ethnic Chinese culture is the main barrier to discussion on ACP.•The importance of advance directives related to a good death must be explained to residents and their family separately.
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ISSN:0897-1897
1532-8201
DOI:10.1016/j.apnr.2024.151766