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Published in: BMC Public Health 1/2019

Open Access 01-12-2019 | Care | Research article

How to increase public participation in advance care planning: findings from a World Café to elicit community group perspectives

Authors: Patricia D. Biondo, Seema King, Barinder Minhas, Konrad Fassbender, Jessica E. Simon, on behalf of the Advance Care Planning Collaborative Research and Innovation Opportunities Program (ACP CRIO)

Published in: BMC Public Health | Issue 1/2019

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Abstract

Background

In 2014, Alberta, Canada broke new ground in having the first provincial healthcare policy and procedure for advance care planning (ACP), the process of communicating and documenting a person’s future healthcare preferences. However, to date public participation and awareness of ACP remains limited. The aim of this initiative was to elicit community group perspectives on how to help people learn about and participate in ACP.

Methods

Targeted invitations were sent to over 300 community groups in Alberta (e.g. health/disease, seniors/retirement, social/service, legal, faith-based, funeral planning, financial, and others). Sixty-seven participants from 47 community groups attended a “World Café”. Participants moved between tables at fixed time intervals, and in small groups discussed three separate ACP-related questions. Written comments were captured by participants and facilitators. Each comment was coded according to Michie et al.’s Theoretical Domains Framework, and mapped to the Capability, Opportunity and Motivation behavior change system (COM-B) in order to identify candidate intervention strategies.

Results

Of 800 written comments, 76% mapped to the Opportunity: Physical COM-B component of behavior, reflecting a need for access to ACP resources. The most common intervention functions identified pertained to Education, Environmental Restructuring, Training, and Enablement. We synthesized the intervention functions and qualitative comments into eight recommendations for engaging people in ACP. These pertain to access to informational resources, group education and facilitation, health system processes, use of stories, marketing, integration into life events, inclusion of business partners, and harmonization of terminology.

Conclusions

There was broad support for the role of community groups in promoting ACP. Eight recommendations for engaging the public in ACP were generated and have been shared with stakeholders.
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Metadata
Title
How to increase public participation in advance care planning: findings from a World Café to elicit community group perspectives
Authors
Patricia D. Biondo
Seema King
Barinder Minhas
Konrad Fassbender
Jessica E. Simon
on behalf of the Advance Care Planning Collaborative Research and Innovation Opportunities Program (ACP CRIO)
Publication date
01-12-2019
Publisher
BioMed Central
Keyword
Care
Published in
BMC Public Health / Issue 1/2019
Electronic ISSN: 1471-2458
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-019-7034-4

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