Using a hypothetical scenario to inform psychiatric advance directives

被引:11
|
作者
Van Citters, Aricca D. [2 ]
Naidoo, Umadevi [3 ]
Foti, Mary Ellen [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Massachusetts, Sch Med, Dept Psychiat, Worcester, MA 01655 USA
[2] Dartmouth Med Sch, Dartmouth Psychiat Res Ctr, Lebanon, NH USA
[3] Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Psychiat, Boston, MA 02114 USA
关键词
D O I
10.1176/appi.ps.58.11.1467
中图分类号
R19 [保健组织与事业(卫生事业管理)];
学科分类号
摘要
Objectives: The study addressed whether a hypothetical psychiatric scenario is a feasible approach for eliciting psychiatric treatment preferences and identified consumer preferences regarding involuntary care. Methods: Community-residing adults with serious mental illness (N=150) voluntarily completed the Health Care Preferences Questionnaire to determine treatment preferences in response to the use of psychiatric medications, seclusion and restraint, and electroconvulsive therapy (ECT). A vignette was used to determine preferences first with respect to an imaginary patient and then with respect to the respondent. Results: Few participants were distressed by the psychiatric scenario (7%). In regard to their own care, in an emergency most participants supported the use of involuntary treatments (medications, 70%; medication injection, 76%; and seclusion and restraint, 73%), with the exception of ECT (quick treatment, 32%; if life is in danger, 60%). Participants were less likely to support treatments for themselves than for an imaginary patient. The majority (65%) identified specific medication preferences. Conclusions: Scenarios about the state of medical and psychiatric health are a feasible method of identifying treatment preferences. They are well tolerated and may serve as a model for assisting persons with serious mental illness in considering difficult treatment decisions.
引用
收藏
页码:1467 / 1471
页数:5
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] PSYCHIATRIC ADVANCE DIRECTIVES: A STAKEHOLDERS ' ANALYSIS ON A MULTISTAGE SCENARIO
    Lorant, V.
    EUROPEAN PSYCHIATRY, 2011, 26
  • [2] Australian Psychiatrists' Support for Psychiatric Advance Directives: Responses to a Hypothetical Vignette
    Sellars, Marcus
    Fullam, Rachael
    O'Leary, Catherine
    Mountjoy, Rachel
    Mawren, Daveena
    Weller, Penelope
    Newton, Richard
    Brophy, Lisa
    McEwan, Troy
    Silvester, William
    PSYCHIATRY PSYCHOLOGY AND LAW, 2017, 24 (01) : 61 - 73
  • [3] Psychiatric Advance Directives
    Sofer, Dalia
    AMERICAN JOURNAL OF NURSING, 2019, 119 (05) : 16 - 17
  • [4] Assessing competence to complete psychiatric advance directives with the competence assessment tool for psychiatric advance directives
    Srebnik, D
    Appelbaum, PS
    Russo, J
    COMPREHENSIVE PSYCHIATRY, 2004, 45 (04) : 239 - 245
  • [5] Psychiatric Advance Directives: A Call for Humanization
    Caraco, Cherene
    Smith, Barbara B.
    Ward, Robert
    PSYCHIATRIC SERVICES, 2023, 74 (04) : 331 - 331
  • [6] New research on psychiatric advance directives
    Marvin Swartz
    Jeffrey Swanson
    Eric Elbogen
    BMC Psychiatry, 7 (Suppl 1)
  • [7] Psychiatric advance directives: a stakeholders analysis
    Lorant, V.
    Nicaise, P.
    Geerts, C.
    Dubois, V.
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PUBLIC HEALTH, 2010, 20 : 217 - 217
  • [8] Increasing the use of psychiatric advance directives
    Olsen, Douglas P.
    NURSING ETHICS, 2017, 24 (03) : 265 - 267
  • [9] ADVANCE DIRECTIVES FOR PSYCHIATRIC-TREATMENT
    APPELBAUM, PS
    HOSPITAL AND COMMUNITY PSYCHIATRY, 1991, 42 (10): : 983 - 984
  • [10] Psychiatric advance directives and the role of autonomy
    Ambrosini, Daniel L.
    Crocker, Anne G.
    SANTE MENTALE AU QUEBEC, 2009, 34 (02): : 51 - 74