Primary care clinicians care for most persons with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRDs), yet lack dementia-specific skills in advance care planning (ACP). To develop and evaluate a training toolkit for primary care clinicians to improve ACP communication for people with ADRD and their families. Clinical practice outcomes assessment and pre-post-training evaluation. Intervention training toolkit addressed ACP skills by dementia stage: (1) advance directives in early dementia, (2) decision-making capacity in moderate dementia, (3) Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) in late-stage dementia, and (4) hospice and hospitalization in advanced dementia. Nonhospitalized clinical care sites, 51 clinicians in North Carolina, USA. Data collection utilized structured chart abstractions and pre- and post-training surveys. Of 51 participants trained, 33 had encounters with patients with ADRD in study period. Most participants were women ( = 42), white ( = 37), and physicians ( = 31). Participants increased documentation of surrogates (22.7% vs. 35.5%, = 0.03), decision-making capacity (13.5% vs.23.2%, = 0.04), and POLST completion (9.2% vs. 18.8%, = 0.03). Training increased ACP documentation (6.4% vs. 14.5%, = 0.031) and goals of care (GOC) decision-making discussions (17.0% vs. 31.9%, = 0.005). In pre-post-comparisons, participant confidence increased in determining capacity, exploring dementia prognosis, GOC, eliciting surrogates, and leading family meetings (all < 0.001). Most participants strongly agreed that the training addressed skills used in practice ( = 34), contained clear language ( = 40), took an appropriate amount of time ( = 32), and was designed effectively ( = 35). This video-based training resource increased the use of dementia-specific ACP communication skills and clinician confidence.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1089/jpm.2020.0638 | DOI Listing |
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