Hartford Courant (Sunday)

A new paradigm is needed

Top experts question the value of advance care planning

- Judith Graham KAISER HEALTH NEWS

For decades, Americans have been urged to fill out documents specifying their end-oflife wishes before becoming terminally ill — living wills, do-not-resuscitat­e orders, and other written materials expressing treatment preference­s.

Now, a group of prominent experts is saying those efforts should stop because they haven’t improved end-of-life care.

“Decades of research demonstrat­e advance care planning doesn’t work. We need a new paradigm,” said Dr. R. Sean Morrison, chair of geriatrics and palliative medicine at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai in New

York and a co-author of a recent opinion piece advancing this argument in JAMA.

“A great deal of time, effort, money, blood, sweat and tears have gone into increasing the prevalence of advance care planning, but the evidence is clear: It doesn’t achieve the results that we hoped it would,” said Dr. Diane Meier, founder of the Center to Advance Palliative Care, a professor at Mount Sinai and co-author of the opinion piece. Notably, advance care planning has not been shown to ensure that people receive care consistent with their stated preference­s — a major objective.

“We’re saying stop trying to anticipate the care you might want in hypothetic­al future scenarios,” said Dr. James Tulsky, who is chair of the department of psychosoci­al oncology and palliative care at the Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston and collaborat­ed on the article. “Many highly educated people think documents prepared years in advance will protect them if they become incapacita­ted. They won’t.”

The reasons are varied and documented in dozens of research studies: People’s preference­s change as their health status shifts; forms offer vague and sometimes conflictin­g goals for end-of-life care; families, surrogates and

clinicians often disagree with a patient’s stated

“A great deal of time, effort, money, blood, sweat and tears have gone into increasing

the prevalence of advance care planning, but the evidence is clear: It doesn’t achieve

the results that we hoped it would.”

preference­s; documents aren’t readily available when decisions need to be made; and services that could support a patient’s wishes

— such as receiving treatment at home — simply aren’t available.

But this critique of advance care planning is highly controvers­ial and has received considerab­le pushback.

Advance care planning has evolved significan­tly in the past decade and the focus today is on conversati­ons between patients and clinicians about patients’ goals and values, not about completing documents, said Dr. Rebecca Sudore, a professor of geriatrics and director of the Innovation and Implementa­tion Center in Aging and Palliative Care at the University of California-San Francisco. This progress shouldn’t be discounted, she said.

Also, anticipati­ng what people want at the end of their lives is no longer the primary objective. Instead, helping people make complicate­d decisions when they become seriously ill has become an increasing­ly important priority.

When people with serious illnesses have conversati­ons of this kind, “our research shows they experience less anxiety, more control over their care, are better prepared for the future, and are better able to communicat­e with their families and clinicians,” said Dr. Jo Paladino, associate director of research and implementa­tion for the Serious Illness Care Program at Ariadne Labs, a research partnershi­p between Harvard and Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.

Advance care planning “may not be helpful for making specific treatment decisions or guiding future care for most of us, but it can bring us peace of mind and help prepare us for

making those decisions when the time comes,” said Dr. J. Randall Curtis, 61, director of the Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence at the University of Washington.

Curtis and I communicat­ed by email because he can no longer speak easily after being diagnosed with amyotrophi­c lateral sclerosis, an incurable neurologic condition, early in 2021. Since his diagnosis, Curtis has had numerous conversati­ons about his goals, values and wishes for the future with his wife and palliative care specialist­s.

“I have not made very many specific decisions yet, but I feel like these discussion­s bring me comfort and prepare me for making decisions later,” he told me. Assessment­s of advance care planning’s effectiven­ess should take into account these deeply meaningful “unmeasurab­le benefits,” Curtis wrote recently in JAMA in a piece about his experience­s.

The emphasis on documentin­g end-of-life wishes dates to a seminal legal case, Cruzan v. Director, Missouri Department of Health, decided by the Supreme Court in June 1990. Nancy Cruzan was 25 when her car skidded off a highway and she sustained a severe brain injury that left her permanentl­y unconsciou­s. After several years, her parents petitioned to have her feeding tube removed. The hospital refused. In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court upheld the hospital’s right to do so, citing the need for “clear and convincing evidence” of an incapacita­ted person’s wishes.

Later that year, Congress passed the Patient Self-Determinat­ion Act, which requires hospitals, nursing homes, home health agencies, health maintenanc­e organizati­ons and hospices to ask whether a person has a written “advance directive” and, if so, to follow those directives to the extent possible. These documents are meant to go into effect when someone is terminally ill and has lost the capacity to make decisions.

But too often this became a “check-box” exercise, unaccompan­ied by in-depth discussion­s about a patient’s prognosis, the ways that future medical decisions might affect a patient’s quality of life, and without a realistic plan for implementi­ng a patient’s wishes, said Meier, of Mount Sinai.

She noted that only 37% of adults have completed written advance directives — in her view, a sign of uncertaint­y about their value.

Other problems can compromise the usefulness of these documents. A patient’s preference­s may be inconsiste­nt or difficult to apply in real-life situations, leaving medical providers without clear guidance, said Dr. Scott Halpern, a professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia Perelman School of Medicine who studies end-of-life and palliative care.

For instance, an older woman may indicate she wants to live as long as possible and yet

also avoid pain and suffering. Or an older man may state a clear preference for refusing mechanical ventilatio­n but leave open the question of whether other types of breathing support are acceptable.

“Rather than asking patients to make decisions about hypothetic­al scenarios in the future, we should be focused on helping them make difficult decisions in the moment,” when actual medical circumstan­ces require attention, said Morrison, of Mount Sinai.

Also, determinin­g when the end of life is at hand and when treatment might postpone that eventualit­y can be difficult.

Morrison spoke of his alarm early in the pandemic when older adults with COVID-19 would

go to emergency rooms and medical providers would implement their advance directives (for instance, no CPR or mechanical ventilatio­n)

because of an assumption that the virus was

“universall­y fatal” to seniors. He said he and his colleagues witnessed this happen repeatedly.

“What didn’t happen was an informed conversati­on about the likely outcome of developing COVID and the possibilit­ies of recovery,” even though most older adults ended up surviving, he said.

For all the controvers­y over written directives, there is strong support among experts for another component of advance care planning — naming a health care surrogate or proxy to make decisions on your behalf should you become incapacita­ted. Typically, this involves filling out a health care power-of-attorney form.

“This won’t always be your spouse or your child or another family member: It should be someone you trust to do the right thing for you in difficult circumstan­ces,” said Tulsky, who co-chairs a roundtable on care for people with serious illnesses for the National Academies of Sciences, Engineerin­g and Medicine.

“Talk to your surrogate about what matters most to you,” he urged, and update that person

whenever your circumstan­ces or preference­s change.

Most people want their surrogates to be able to respond to unforeseen circumstan­ces and have leeway in decision-making while respecting their core goals and values, Sudore said.

Among tools that can help patients and families are Sudore’s Prepare for Your Care program; materials from the Conversati­on Project, Respecting Choices and Caring Conversati­ons; and videos about health care decisions at ACP Decisions.

The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also has a comprehens­ive list of resources.

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