4.5 Article

Operationalizing legal rights in end-of- life decision-making: A qualitative study

Journal

PALLIATIVE MEDICINE
Volume 35, Issue 10, Pages 1889-1896

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD
DOI: 10.1177/02692163211040189

Keywords

Advance care planning; end-of-life decision-making; law; legal rights; palliative care

Funding

  1. Australian Research Council [LP140100883]
  2. Cancer Councils of Victoria, Queensland
  3. New South Wales, Australia
  4. Australian Research Council [LP140100883] Funding Source: Australian Research Council

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The study identified barriers and facilitators to the operationalization of legal rights in end-of-life decision-making for terminally-ill patients, family members, and substitute decision-makers in Australia. These factors were found across systemic, individual, and communication domains, illustrating the importance of healthcare practitioners in supporting or excluding individuals in decision-making processes.
Background: For a patient's legal right to make end-of-life treatment decisions to be respected, health care practitioners, patients and their substitute decision-makers must know what rights exist and how to assert them (or support others to assert them). Yet very little is known about what enhances or obstructs the operationalization of legal rights from the perspective of patients, family members and substitute decision-makers. Aim: To explore barriers and facilitators to the operationalization of rights in end-of-life decision-making from the perspectives of terminally-ill patients and family members and substitute decision-makers of terminally ill patients in Australia. Design: Semi-structured interviews (face to face and telephone) with patients, family or substitute decision-makers experienced in end-of-life decision-making completed between November 2016 and October 2017. A thematic content analysis of interview transcripts. Setting/participants: Purposive sampling across three Australian states provided 16 terminally-ill patients and 33 family and/or substitute decision-makers. Results: Barriers and facilitators emerged across three overlapping domains: systemic factors; individual factors, influenced by personal characteristics and decision-making approach; and communication and information. Health care practitioners play a key role in either supporting or excluding patients, family and substitute decision-makers in decision-making. Conclusion: In addition to enhancing legal literacy of community members and health practitioners about end-of-life decision-making, support such as open communication, advocacy and help with engaging with advanced care planning is needed to facilitate people operationalizing their legal rights, powers and duties. Palliative care and other support services should be more widely available to people both within and outside health systems.

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