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1 iritual support, preference for heroics, and advance care planning).
2 s for the needs of caregivers, and timing of advance care planning.
3 research related to decision aids for adult advance care planning.
4 % of participants (n = 43) had not discussed advance care planning.
5 social care underpins a growing interest in advance care planning.
6 aged a diverse sample of homeless persons in advance care planning.
7 help promote more accurate and comprehensive advance care planning.
8 ual support, QOL, treatment preferences, and advance care planning.
9 ty of life (QOL), treatment preferences, and advance care planning.
10 ioner relationship were associated with more advance care planning.
11 their families more than their physicians in advance care planning.
12 gate decision making and documents to aid in advance care planning.
13 ons, setting postoperative expectations, and advance care planning.
18 their use in pain, dyspnea, depression, and advance care planning (ACP), and to identify research ga
19 -documented racial and ethnic differences in advance care planning (ACP), we know little about why th
20 beneficial treatment are felt to be improved advance care planning and communication training for hea
21 eholders (> 80%) and perceived that improved advance care planning and communication training would b
22 ication with family, encouraging appropriate advance care planning and decision making, supporting ho
23 ng therapies have made decision making about advance care planning and end-of-life issues more comple
24 t-provider communication issues ("paucity of advance care planning and goals-of-care designation," "m
25 In the base-case analysis, if in-hospital advance care planning and ICU-based palliative care cons
28 atic review to answer three questions: 1) Do advance care planning and palliative care interventions
29 ards for clinician patient communication and advance care planning and that payers and care delivery
30 red decision making about treatment options, advance care planning, and attention to physical, emotio
31 collected participant demographics, previous advance care planning, and decision control preferences.
32 ychosocial and religious/spiritual measures, advance care planning, and end-of-life treatment prefere
33 are system pursues rationing, more effective advanced care planning, and augmented capacity to care f
34 h enhanced communication, medication safety, advanced care planning, and enhanced training to manage
35 rts have led to changes in patterns of care, advanced care planning, and symptom control among childr
36 ife throughout the disease course, sensitive advanced care planning, and timely patient-centred end-o
37 d trial of a video-assisted intervention and advance care planning checklist versus a verbal descript
40 ety and fear of inaction, and limitations in advance care planning-contribute to communication challe
41 spiritual needs, preference for heroics, and advance care planning (do-not-resuscitate order, living
43 should include further research, training of advance care planning facilitators, dissemination and ac
44 cision support tool and patient checklist on advance care planning for patients with heart failure.
45 ity and reduce costs through two mechanisms: advance care planning for patients with life-limiting il
46 ing decision aids as interventions for adult advance care planning found that most are proprietary or
52 OMMENDATION 5: Clinicians should ensure that advance care planning, including completion of advance d
53 ug users, and less educated individuals need advance care planning interventions in clinical HIV prog
54 ies reporting on ICU admissions suggest that advance care planning interventions reduce the relative
55 uctured intervention in health care and that advance care planning is best viewed as one component in
57 t there demonstrate how the ordinary lack of advance care planning is deleterious for patients who ar
61 wledge about end-of-life care is needed, and advance care planning must be preceded by education abou
62 effect of palliative care interventions and advance care planning on ICU admission and length of sta
63 tudy type and quality, patients who received advance care planning or palliative care interventions c
64 t significantly change their diet, exercise, advanced care planning, or cancer screening behaviors.
65 The authors contend that the objective for advance care planning ought to be the preparation of pat
66 tellectual disabilities included problems in advanced care planning (p=0.0003), adherence to the Ment
67 associated consistently with improvements in advance care planning, patient and caregiver satisfactio
70 c physical and emotional symptom management, advance care planning), provided by primary care and car
75 integration of palliation into cancer care, advance care planning, sentinel events as markers for th
76 vance directives offer only limited benefit, advance care planning should emphasize not the completio
78 ity of life, symptom burden, survival, mood, advance care planning, site of death, health care satisf
79 in these settings, including innovations in advance care planning, staff training, and systematic ch
80 lude family members in future discussions of advance care planning than wanted to include physicians
82 ians and nurses from practice settings where advance care planning typically takes place were surveye
84 in pulmonary rehabilitation are receptive to advance care planning, which is promoted by education on
85 Questions about whom patients involve in advance care planning, whom patients would like to inclu
88 breaking bad news, setting treatment goals, advance care planning, withholding or withdrawing therap
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