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Evaluation of a Novel Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (CPR) Video Decision aid to Promote Shared Decision-making with Nephrology Patients and Families

Date

2017-07-10

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

ORCID

0000-0001-8443-6204

Type

Thesis

Degree Level

Masters

Abstract

People with end stage renal disease (ESRD) face important health-related decisions concerning end-of-life care and the use of life-support technologies. They already require technology to sustain life, relying on dialysis to provide kidney function. People with ESRD have a high risk of cardiac arrest because dialysis worsens cardiac disease. In the case of cardiac arrest, the healthcare team may decide to offer cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) to try to restore function and prolong life. While people often want to be involved in making decisions about their health, there are many challenges. People with advanced illness may have limited or wavering ability to participate fully in decision-making conversations – or lack decisional capacity for making decisions. Additionally, they may have a limited understanding of CPR and tend to receive inconsistent information on the process and outcome of CPR. CPR is less effective in older adults with advanced disease of any kind, resulting in difficult discussions between patients, their families, and healthcare professionals. Unfortunately, these discussions are often avoided. Shared decision-making approaches target overcoming these challenges. The objectives of this research are: 1) to analyze the concept of decisional capacity as it relates to medical decision-making and, 2) to design, test, and analyze a novel CPR video decision aid (VDA) with nephrology patients and their families in a clinical setting. The Interprofessional Shared Decision-making Model was used as a framework to guide the research. Results of from the study indicate that CPR-VDA was feasible and acceptable to patients with ESRD, their families, and the healthcare team in the nephrology setting, even when patients’ illness and treatment caused difficulty attending to all aspects of the decision-making process all of the time. The CPR-VDA improved patient and family knowledge about CPR, clarified values around the decision, improved the patients’ ability to make a decision about CPR confidently, and reduced decisional conflict (uncertainty) amongst patients, families, and physicians despite any limitations to patient decisional capacity. All patients in the study were able to participate in conversations and decision-making about CPR with the assistance of the CPR-VDA and decision coaching from an advanced practice nurse.

Description

Keywords

shared decision-making, video decision aid, cardiopulmonary resuscitation, decisional capacity

Citation

Degree

Master of Nursing (M.N.)

Department

Nursing

Program

Nursing

Part Of

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DOI

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