Am. J. Respir. Crit. Care Med., Vol 154, No. 6, 12 1996, 1735-1740.
Attitudes regarding advance directives among patients in pulmonary rehabilitation
JE Heffner, B Fahy, L Hilling and C Barbieri
Department of Medicine, St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center, Phoenix, Arizona 85001, USA.
We performed a cross-sectional, descriptive questionnaire study in two
pulmonary rehabilitation programs to assess: (1) attitudes of 105 subjects
with chronic lung conditions about end-of-life decision- making; (2) the
determinants of these attitudes; and (3) patient acceptance of
rehabilitation programs as foci for education about advance directives
(ADs). We found that 99 of the 105 subjects (94.3%) had health worries, the
most common of which was fear of increasing dyspnea (33.3%). Although 93.8%
had opinions about intubation, less than 42% had completed an AD. Most
subjects wanted information about ADs (88.6%) and life-support (68.6%);
pulmonary rehabilitation programs, lawyers, and physicians were preferred
sources for AD information. Although 98.9% of the patients wanted
patient-physician AD discussions, only 19.0% had such discussions, only
15.2% had discussed life-support, and only 14.3% thought that their
physicians understood their end-of-life wishes. Subject willingness to
undergo intubation varied with baseline health, likelihood of survival, and
anticipated health following extubation. We conclude that patients in
pulmonary rehabilitation programs desire more information about end-of-life
issues than is currently provided by physicians. They regard pulmonary
rehabilitation educators as valuable sources of AD education.
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Copyright © 1996 American Thoracic Society
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