Dados do Trabalho
Título
MAPPING ADVANCE CARE PLANNING AND ADVANCE DIRECTIVES IN LATIN AMERICA
Introdução
It is unclear whether or how low- and middle-income countries have implemented Advance Care Planning (ACP) and Advance Directives (AD).
Objetivo e Método
We aimed to map the current state of ACP/AD in Latin America. This cross-sectional mixed-methods survey of ACP/AD in LA comprised interviews with 18 key informants from 18 out of 20 countries, most of whom were appointed by national Palliative Care Associations. Interviews occurred online with each informant encompassing various issues ranging from AD regulations to ACP/AD in the context of end-of-life clinical decision making. We performed member checking and data triangulation to confirm our findings.
Resultados
Only eight (44%) countries have some form of ACP/AD regulations. Most regulatory frameworks tend to adopt a legalistic pattern heavily influenced by the North American model. Despite that characteristic of AD regulations in LA, the leading strategy used by patients to avoid unwanted treatment at the end of life is through conversations with their families, whereas the least common strategy was consulting with a lawyer. In six (33%) countries, informants believed it was common for patients to grant their families with permission to modify their previous choices regarding future treatments. The religiousness/spirituality of populations plays an important role regarding the implementation of ACP in the region. Additionally, respecting patients’ preferences of care at the end of life appears to be tied more to aspects related to the characteristics of doctor-patient relationship, and the degree of integration of palliative care into the healthcare system than the existence or content of AD regulations. There was consensus that none of the countries provide sufficient education about ACP/AD to healthcare professionals.
Conclusão/Considerações finais
Our findings encourage rethinking ACP/AD in LA from a decolonial perspective, considering characteristics such as the preference for a relational model of autonomy in several countries and the importance of taking the religiousness/spirituality of individuals into account during ACP conversations. Our data also suggest that honoring patients’ preferences of care at the end of life entails integrating palliative care into health care systems, educating healthcare professionals and the population, and fostering longitudinal trusting relationships between those professionals with patients and their families.
Funding: FAPESP 2022/02254-9.
Reference: Pastrana et al, Atlas de Cuidados Paliativos en Latinoamérica 2020
Palavras Chave
Advance Care Planning; Advance Directives; Palliative Care
Área
Outras áreas
Instituições
Faculdade de Medicina de Botucatu - UNESP - São Paulo - Brasil
Autores
NATÁLIA ROCHA TARDELLI, FERNANDA BONO FUKUSHIMA, ALEX SANDER WATANABE PALÁCIO, DANIEL NEVES FORTE, LEONARDO DE ANDRADE RODRIGUES BRITO, EDISON IGLESIAS DE OLIVEIRA VIDAL