What is it about?
Dementia is a rising issue worldwide; people living with dementia (PwD) can live for a very long time with their mental capacity gradually declining. There will come a point when they cannot make decisions for themselves; families and healthcare staff will have to make the decisions for them but the decisions that are made may not be what PwD want. This is a review of what affects PwDs’ decisions to talk about their future plans looking from 5 perspectives: 1) PwD, 2) their family, 3) healthcare team, 4) system or wider view and, 5) time.
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Why is it important?
Planning for future care amongst PwD involves several people. It is necessary to understand their interrelationships, and how those factors affect those plans. We found that in order to talk about it effectively, healthcare teams need to know more about the dementia trajectory and how to talk about future plans with PwD, informally, over time. Timing to talk about it is also another huge gap in literature: when would be the best time to talk about this with them? We don’t know (yet).
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This page is a summary of: A narrative review of facilitating and inhibiting factors in advance care planning initiation in people with dementia, European Geriatric Medicine, April 2020, Springer Science + Business Media,
DOI: 10.1007/s41999-020-00314-1.
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