Communication processes in an advance care planning initiative: A socio-ecological perspective for service evaluation
Publication Date
1-1-2024
Document Type
Article
Publication Title
Palliative Medicine
DOI
10.1177/02692163241277394
Abstract
Background: Advance care planning initiatives are becoming more widespread, increasing expectations for providers to engage in goals of care conversations. However, less is known about how providers communicate advance care planning within and throughout a health care system. Aim: To explore perspectives of communication processes in the rollout of an advance care planning initiative. Design: Theoretically informed secondary analysis of 31 semi-structured interviews. Setting/Participants: Key partners in a Veterans Health Administration goals of care initiative. Results: Using the constant comparative approach followed by qualitative mapping of themes to the layers of the Socio-Ecological Model, four themes and corresponding Socio-Ecological layers were identified: Goals of Care Communication Training (Policy, Community, and Institutional) requires more resources across sites and better messaging to reduce provider misconceptions and promote an institutional culture invested in advance care planning; Interprofessional Communication (Interpersonal) suggests care team coordination is needed to facilitate continuity in goals of care messaging; Communication in Documentation (Institutional, Interpersonal, and Intrapersonal) highlights the need for capturing the context for goals of care preferences; and Patient/Family Communication (Interpersonal and Intrapersonal) encourages offering materials and informational resources early to facilitate rapport building and readiness to determine goals of care. Conclusions: Findings support the need for initiatives to incorporate an evaluation of how goals of care are discussed beyond the interpersonal exchange between patient and provider and signal opportunities for applying the Socio-Ecological Model to better understand goals of care communication processes, including opportunities to improve initiation and documentation of goals of care.
Funding Number
19-075
Funding Sponsor
U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs
Keywords
advance care planning, communication, Goals of care, quality improvement
Department
Communication Studies
Recommended Citation
Marie C. Haverfield, Jessica Ma, Anne Walling, David B. Bekelman, Cati Brown-Johnson, Natalie Lo, Karl A. Lorenz, and Karleen F. Giannitrapani. "Communication processes in an advance care planning initiative: A socio-ecological perspective for service evaluation" Palliative Medicine (2024). https://doi.org/10.1177/02692163241277394