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University of Technology Sydney Law Research Series |
Last Updated: 28 August 2017
How Do Lawyers Assist their Clients with Advance Care
Planning? Findings from a Cross-Sectional Survey of Lawyers in Alberta,
Canada
Nola M Ries, Maureen Douglas, Jessica Simon and Konrad Fassbender
Nola M Ries, BA (Hons) JD, MPA, LLM, is Associate Professor,
Faculty of Law, University of Technology Sydney, Australia and External Research
Fellow, Health Law Institute, Faculty of Law, University of Alberta, Canada.
Corresponding author: nola.ries@uts.edu.au
Maureen Douglas, BA,
LLB is Senior Project Coordinator, Advance Care Planning Collaborative Research
and Innovation Opportunities Program, University
of Alberta.
Jessica
Simon, MD, FRCPC is Associate Professor and Division Head for Palliative
Medicine in the Faculty of Medicine, University of Calgary, and
Physician
Consultant, Advance Care Planning and Goals of Care, Calgary Zone, Alberta
Health Services.
Konrad Fassbender, PhD, is Assistant
Professor and Scientific Director of the Covenant Health Palliative Institute
in the Faculty of Medicine and Dentistry, University of
Alberta.
Abstract: Advance care planning (ACP) is a process
of thinking about, discussing and documenting one’s preferences for future
health care.
ACP has important benefits: people who have a written directive are
more likely to receive care that accords with their preferences,
have fewer
hospitalizations, and die in their preferred location. This article focuses on
the important role that legal professionals
have in advising and assisting
clients with ACP. Studies report that people who have a written advance care
plan are more likely
to have received assistance in preparing the document from
a lawyer than from a doctor. Yet virtually no research engages with the
legal
profession to understand lawyers’ attitudes, beliefs and practices in this
important area. This article starts to fill
this gap by reporting the findings
of a survey of lawyers in the province of Alberta, Canada. The results reveal
lawyers’ practices
in relation to ACP, their perceptions of their
professional role and factors that support or hinder lawyers in working with
clients
on ACP, and their preferences for resources to assist them in helping
their clients. To our knowledge, this is the first survey of
lawyers on their
practices in relation to ACP.
Acknowledgements: We acknowledge
funding support from the Alberta Innovates Health Solutions Collaborative
Research and Innovation Opportunities (CRIO)
Program Grant #201201157 as well as
Campus Alberta funding. We thank members of the Canadian Bar Association and
other stakeholders
who contributed their time and expertise to the survey
development. Patricia Biondo, Research Manager, Advance Care Planning CRIO
Program, provided tireless organizational support for this research
project.
How do Lawyers Assist their Clients with Advance Care Planning? Findings from a Cross-Sectional Survey of Lawyers in Alberta, Canada
Introduction
Advance care planning (ACP) is a process of thinking about, discussing
and documenting one’s preferences for future health care.
Specific legal
rules and processes vary across countries, but in general, ACP is supported by
laws that recognize the right of adults
with decision-making capacity to express
their wishes for future health and personal matters, with the expectation they
will be followed.
These rights are underpinned by common values and aims. The
right to plan for what happens to oneself during future periods of incapacity
promotes self-determination, respects individual autonomy and enables
person-centered care. People may document specific wishes and
personal values in
a written advance care directive and designate decision-makers with the legal
authority to make choices on the
person’s behalf during periods of
incapacity. People who have a written directive are more likely to receive care
that accords
with their preferences, have fewer hospitalizations, and die in
their preferred location.[1]
Substitute decisions makers report reduced decisional conflict when their
choices are guided by prior ACP
conversations.[2] Effective ACP may
also have economic benefits by reducing healthcare
costs.[3]
Much research has
focused on barriers and enablers to ACP for healthcare providers and patients
and complex factors at personal, organizational
and system levels influence ACP
behaviors.[4] Interventions to promote
ACP occur mainly in healthcare settings using diverse strategies that include
educational programs for care
providers and clients, ACP worksheets and forms,
and deployment of trained ACP
facilitators.[5] Researchers have
called for better-designed studies and the development of rigorous evaluation
frameworks to build the evidence base
on what works to improve the uptake and
use of ACP.[6]
Discussion and
documentation of clients’ wishes is vital in healthcare settings, but it
is equally important to improve engagement
with ACP in other contexts. In its
landmark Dying in America report, the Institute of Medicine championed a
“whole-community” approach to the promotion of
ACP.[7] Ideally, people should engage
with ACP before crisis situations arise, in consultation with family, friends
and relevant professional
advisors, and while they have capacity to make and
communicate their decisions.
This article focuses on the important role
that legal professionals have in advising and assisting clients with ACP. Our
work is motivated
by previous studies reporting that people who have a written
advance care plan are more likely to have received assistance in preparing
the
document from a lawyer than from a doctor. In Canada, a survey of residents of
the province of Saskatchewan found that almost
half of the respondents who had a
written care plan had sought help from a lawyer to prepare the document, while
only 5% had consulted
with a
doctor.[8] In Ontario, patients of a
family practice clinic were more likely to have discussed ACP with a lawyer than
their family doctor.[9] A national
study of sick, elderly patients and their family members found that participants
discussed their end of life care wishes
as often or more often with a lawyer
than with a family doctor or medical
specialist.[10]
In the United
States, a survey of adults admitted to four hospitals in California found that
of those with advance directives at the
time of admission, half (49%) had
received help from a lawyer to prepare ACP documents and only 6% had received
help from a doctor.[11] Thirty-five
percent of those with directives viewed lawyers as helpful sources of expertise
in assisting with writing the documents
and only 1% said physicians were. An
earlier study in Connecticut found that, among people admitted to hospital with
an advance directive,
76% had prepared the document with a lawyer and only 7%
had been prepared with a doctor.[12]
In Germany, Becker and colleagues surveyed 53 people who had an advance
directive to find out if they had obtained help from a professional
in preparing
the document.[13] Just under a
quarter of people had sought such help and, among those, legal professionals
were the most common source of advice.
Lawyers are a key source of help
for people who want to do ACP, yet virtually no research engages with the legal
profession to understand
lawyers’ attitudes, beliefs and practices in this
important area. This article aims to start filling that gap. Gaining an
understanding
of what lawyers currently do in practice, especially their
perspectives on barriers and enablers and their preferences for resources
that
would help them better serve their clients, is a vital first step in devising
interventions to improve lawyers’ practices
and enhance interprofessional
collaboration between lawyers and healthcare professionals.
This article
reports on a survey of lawyers in the province of Alberta, Canada. The objective
of this study was to find out about
lawyers’ practices in relation to ACP,
their perceptions of their professional role and factors that support or hinder
lawyers
in working with clients on ACP, and their preferences for resources to
assist them in helping their clients.
Methods
A cross sectional survey of lawyers practicing in Alberta, Canada, was
undertaken in 2016. The online, anonymous survey was promoted
over a four-month
period (late February to late June) to practicing lawyers via email or through
websites, e-newsletters and/or social
media from the Canadian Bar Association,
the Law Society of Alberta and/or the Legal Education Society of Alberta. Due to
anti-spam
legislation, the legal professional organizations that disseminated
the survey were unable to email the survey invitation directly
to lawyers who
self-identify as practicing in our target areas of Wills & Estates, Elder
Law and Health Law. A screening question
at the start of the survey asked
respondents whether, in their current professional role, they assist clients
with planning for future
mental incapacity by writing a personal directive,
enduring power of attorney, appointing an agent or other matters related to
advance
care planning. Lawyers who responded no were discontinued from
completing the survey.
Survey context
With a population of
nearly 4.2 million people, Alberta is Canada’s fourth most populous
province and around 12% of residents
are aged 65 and
over.[14] The government health
department, Alberta Health Services, promotes advance care planning through its
Conversations Matter
initiative.[15] The Alberta
Personal Directives Act[16]
gives adults with decision-making capacity the right to document their wishes
for future healthcare and to appoint a person (an ‘agent’)
with
legal authority to make healthcare decisions during the appointer’s future
periods of incapacity. The government provides
a personal directive form as a
guide,[17] however a person making a
directive can use another document for this purpose provided it is signed and
witnessed as required by
the statute. A person may file their directive with a
voluntary government registry.[18]
The Alberta Powers of Attorney
Act[19] enables a person to
appoint a person, known as an enduring power of attorney, to make decisions
about financial matters or property
if the appointer loses
capacity.
Survey development
The survey instrument was
developed through a multi-disciplinary consultative process involving members of
the legal profession in
Alberta. We used Michie and colleagues’
Theoretical Domains Framework to inform the survey
development,[20] taking account of
the 14 domains that influence behavior change and the uptake of new
practices.[21] As the survey focused
on individual practitioner behaviors, we explored eight domains: knowledge;
skills; professional/social role
and identity; beliefs about capabilities;
emotion; beliefs about consequences; and social influences. Dialogue between
members of
our research team and the legal profession began in 2014 with a
series of meetings involving a total of around 100 lawyers who are
members of
the Canadian Bar Association
(CBA),[22] a professional
association for lawyers, and participate in interest groups for three practice
areas relevant to ACP: Wills, Estates
and Trusts; Elder Law; and Health Law. The
meetings were an opportunity to introduce our multidisciplinary research team to
members
of the legal profession, especially to those in CBA leadership
positions. Topics discussed included the types of issues clients raise
with
lawyers in relation to ACP, legislation governing advance personal planning and
lawyers’ perceptions of barriers and facilitators
to engaging their
clients with ACP.
In 2015, the research team convened two focus groups
of 12 to 15 lawyers and other stakeholders, including chairs of the CBA interest
groups, lawyers in private practice with significant ACP experience, lawyers
working in the legal aid and government health sector,
and representatives from
the Legal Education Society, the Office of the Public Guardian and Trustee (the
provincial government office
that promotes advance personal planning and deals
with guardianship matters for people with cognitive
disabilities),[23] palliative care
physicians, ethicists, social workers and patient advisors. We discussed the
draft survey and pre-tested it with
eight lawyers, two government health policy
experts and a patient advisor.
The survey consisted of 15 questions that
were primarily closed ended items with Likert category responses. For many
questions, respondents
could select ‘other’ as a response with an
option to provide an open-ended answer in a text box. The first section of
the
survey asked lawyers about their experiences and current practices in assisting
their clients with ACP, including the topics
they cover in ACP conversations and
the resources they use. Several questions explored their beliefs about their
professional role
in relation to ACP, as well as their views on the perceived
benefits of ACP and the barriers to assisting their clients. The middle
section
of the survey asked lawyers about their preferences for the types of ACP
resources they would find useful, as well as their
preferred format for
accessing resources. The final section of the survey collected demographic
information.
Statistical analysis
We performed descriptive
analyses to describe the frequency of responses in each Likert category and to
rank responses by frequency
of facilitators and barriers to engaging clients in
ACP. The full results are available in Appendix 1. For ease of interpretation
we
present collapsed results in three categories: Never or Seldom; Sometimes; Often
or Always.
Results
The total number of survey respondents was
133 with 104 surveys completed in full. We estimate a 7.7% response rate based
on the 1,840
lawyers in the province who are listed in Law Society records as
practicing in Wills & Estates, which is the practice group targeted
by the
newsletters and social media activity that promoted the survey. The Law Society
of Alberta advised us that it typically expects
a response rate of 3 to 4% when
it conducts surveys of lawyers; as a result, we did not aim for our study to
produce results that
would represent the practices of lawyers across the
province or produce statistically significant associations between
respondents’
characteristics and their reported beliefs and experiences.
Instead, the responses of the lawyers who completed the survey provide
valuable
and novel insights into the views of an experienced and knowledgeable population
of practitioners. Over three-quarters of
respondents (77%) reported 10 or more
years of experience in legal practice, 17% had between 2 and 10 years of
experience and 6%
had been in practice for less than 2 years. Two-third of
respondents (66%) are sole practitioners or work in small firms of two to
nine
lawyers and 20% work in mid-size or large firms (between 10-49 lawyers and 50 or
more lawyers, respectively). A majority of
respondents (69%) reported they
assist clients with ACP on a daily or weekly basis. The remainder (31%) said
they advise clients
on a monthly basis. The fact that most respondents have
significant experience and regularly engage in ACP provides greater confidence
in using the survey results as an informative starting point for further work
with the legal profession, including the development
of resources to respond to
knowledge and practice gaps revealed by this study.
Factors that
motivate client engagement with ACP
Respondents were asked what factors
motivate a client to engage in ACP (see Figure 1). Ninety percent of lawyers
said they often or
always bring up the topic as part of a broader discussion of
advance personal planning, such as writing a will and appointing a
decision-maker
to manage financial matters during any future periods of
incapacity. Declining personal health and experiencing the illness or death
of
someone close them are strong motivators for clients to engage in ACP. Nearly
three-quarters of the respondents (73%) said that
clients were motivated to
engage in ACP after receiving a medical diagnosis with life-limiting
implications or due to deteriorating
health. Even more lawyers reported that
clients wanted to do ACP because they had experience as a caregiver or
substitute decision-maker
for another person (80%) or someone close to them had
been ill or died (88%). Interestingly, lawyers report it is more common for
a
client to engage in ACP following a discussion with a financial sector advisor
(70% report this is sometimes or often the motivator)
than with a doctor or
other healthcare provider (54% say this is sometimes or often a motivator).
Several respondents volunteered
that other factors that prompt a client include
discussion with family or friends about ACP or media reports about end of life
issues.
Figure 1: Factors that prompt a client to engage in
ACP
Topics lawyers discuss with
clients
Lawyers were asked about the topics they discuss with clients
during consultations about ACP (see Figure 2). Eighty to ninety percent
of
respondents say they always or often discuss: the appointment of a suitable
person to act as a substitute decision-maker should
the client experience future
periods of impaired capacity; the client’s views on other people who
should be involved in consultations
with healthcare providers if the client
loses capacity to make their own decisions; and the client’s values and
wishes concerning
future care. Three-quarters of respondents say they often or
always discuss with the client whether they would want specific medical
interventions (e.g. CPR, tube feeding) and around 60% always or often ask the
client about their preferences for living arrangements/accommodation
in the
future, as well as their views on organ donation and who should have access to
their health records. Just over 40% always
or often ask their clients about
their wishes about participation in medical research. We did not define
‘medical research’
in the survey instrument, however, we suspect
that lawyers understood this question to refer to discussions about the
client’s
interest in donating their body for post-mortem research, not the
client’s wishes about inclusion in research during future
periods of
incapacity.[24]
Figure 2:
Topics lawyers and clients discuss as part of ACP
As
communication of one’s wishes with key people is an important component of
advance care planning, lawyers were asked who
they encourage their clients to
speak to about their wishes for future healthcare. Nearly all respondents (99%)
said they always
or often encourage clients to speak to the person they appoint
as their designated health decision-maker and nearly 80% said they
always or
often encourage conversations with family members, carer or friends other than
the named decision-maker. Surprisingly,
the results were less uniform in regard
to encouraging a client to talk to their doctor or healthcare provider about
their wishes.
Just over 20% of respondents said they never or seldom encourage
this, around 35% said they sometimes do, and less than half (44%)
say they often
or always do so.
In general, spiritual advisors are not reported as key
people. Nearly 70% of the lawyers we surveyed never or seldom encourage their
clients to talk to spiritual advisors about their wishes for healthcare and
three-quarters of respondents said that conversations
with spiritual advisors
are never or seldom a factor that prompts their clients to engage in ACP.
Barriers to assisting clients with ACP
Lawyers were
asked about barriers that they feel impede them in assisting their clients with
ACP (see Figure 3). The options presented
to them covered both practitioner and
client-centered barriers. The most significant client-centered barrier was
clients’ lack
of preparedness to engage in ACP; nearly three-quarters
(73%) of respondents said this is sometimes or often a problem. A client’s
unwillingness to share personal details with a lawyer was identified as a
hindrance to ACP for slightly under half (44%) of lawyers,
and 55% said such
reticence is seldom or never a problem.
For a majority of lawyers, the
potentially emotional nature of discussing future medical treatment and end of
life care preferences
with clients was not a barrier to ACP discussions. Almost
95% of lawyers said they never or seldom find ACP discussions upsetting
or
uncomfortable and 82% said concerns with upsetting the client were never or
seldom an issue. Similarly, for most respondents (86%),
age, cultural or
religious differences between the lawyer and client are seldom or never a
barrier. Only around 20% of lawyers cited
the time and cost involved in ACP as a
barrier.
Just under half of lawyers revealed some degree of concern with
their own lack of knowledge about the medical aspects of ACP and health
sector
policies and practices. A strong majority of respondents expressed confidence in
their knowledge of the law relevant to ACP,
a finding consistent with the level
of experience of the respondent population.
In general, respondents had
positive attitudes toward ACP and confidence in the value for their clients of
documenting their wishes
for future healthcare. Around three-quarters of
respondents stated they believe that ACP significantly benefits their clients
and
believe that advance care plans will be used in
practice.
Figure 3: Barriers to
engaging clients with ACP
Professional role perceptions
Given that ACP
is often promoted in healthcare settings, we sought to determine lawyers’
views on the extent to which various
ACP-related activities were perceived as
part of a lawyers’ professional role (see Figure 4). Respondents had
consistent views
about the activities they believe are a significant part of a
lawyer’s role, including initiating ACP conversations, providing
ACP
information, drafting specific legal documents, advising on how to minimize
future disputes, and encouraging clients to discuss
their wishes with key
others. In contrast, most respondents said that liaising with a client’s
healthcare provider (with the
client’s consent) was not at all or only
minimally part of their role.
Figure 4: Lawyers’ role
perceptions about ACP activities
Lawyers’ Knowledge of Specific Health Care System
Documents and Processes
The survey asked about lawyers’
knowledge of two key provincial health system initiatives aimed at improving
communication about
and compliance with people’s healthcare wishes,
especially for end-of-life care. These are the Goals of Care Designation (GCD)
and Green Sleeve.[25] A GCD is a
medical order that communicates the general intent of care (resuscitative,
medical or comfort care) and provides direction
on specific interventions and
locations of care. A doctor or nurse practitioner prepares the order in
consultation with the patient,
or a legally authorized decision maker if the
patient lacks decision-making capacity. The Green Sleeve is a green plastic
folder
used to store ACP documents, including a conversation tracking record,
advance directive and GCD order. Patients can obtain a Green
Sleeve from their
healthcare provider and are educated to keep their care planning documents in
the folder and to bring it to all
appointments. Healthcare providers are trained
to ask patients for their Green Sleeve and to check whether documents in the
folder
accurately reflect their current wishes. Patients are also educated to
keep the Green Sleeve on or near their refrigerator at home
as emergency medical
responders are trained to look for it in that location.
Since lawyers
are important advisors for clients on ACP, ideally they should be aware of
government and health sector initiatives
and be able to educate their clients
using messages that are consistent with what they hear in healthcare settings.
Approximately
half of respondents (51%) said they knew what a GCD is and 46%
were familiar with a Green Sleeve. Just over one third of lawyers
report that
their clients have discussed or shared their Green Sleeve and associated
documents during a legal appointment.
Resources Lawyers Currently Use
and What They Would Find Helpful
A majority of respondents (97%) use an
advance directive template. Legislation in Alberta does not mandate the use of a
specific statutory
form and lawyers reported varying sources for the template
they use. Lawyers commonly said that they used a law firm precedent or
a
template they had personally developed. Only one lawyer reporting getting health
care provider feedback on the template s/he developed.
Several respondents
volunteered that they review and modify templates periodically (e.g. every two
years) to take account of new
legal or policy developments. In contrast, one
lawyer stated that the firm rarely modifies its template, with specific
religious
requests of a client being one basis for modifying the standard form.
Lawyers who mentioned an external source for a directive template
commonly
mentioned the Legal Education Society of Alberta, an organization that provides
continuing professional education and development
for lawyers in the
province.[26]
Respondents
were asked about the usefulness of eight ACP resources. The vast majority of
respondents rated all but one of the resources
as “useful” or
“very useful”: information about how GCD orders and Personal
Directives function together
in practice (89% of respondents said
“useful” or “very useful”); a best practice guide for
ACP (83%); information
about health care service policies and resources (83%);
worksheets for clients to identify and express their values, wishes and
preferences
(81%); legal resources (78%); and an explanation of relevant health
care issues, language or specific disease/treatment (78%). Just
over half of
respondents (52%) said that a third party with specialized training in ACP would
be useful or very useful.
Nearly three-quarters (74%) of respondents
said they prefer an online format for these resources and 40% said they prefer
print format.
When asked about their preferred format for continuing
professional development, the majority (64%) said they prefer in-person
seminars.
Printed and webinar formats were preferred by 47% and 34% of
respondents, respectively.
Discussion
Comparing
health and legal professionals
Various studies have investigated
healthcare providers’ perceptions of barriers that hinder them in engaging
patients in ACP.
In a 2015 systematic review, Lund et al reported that key
barriers were competing work demands, the potentially emotional and
time-consuming
nature of ACP conversations and beliefs that care plans will not
be followed even if they are
made.[27] It has been urged that
healthcare providers must overcome the taboos of talking about future incapacity
and the end of life in order
to engage their clients in ACP; practitioners who
avoid these conversations “[miss] a golden opportunity to let the person
open up to what is important in their lives and what is worrying
them.”[28] ACP must be
normalized into medical care; just as doctors counsel on disease screening and
healthy lifestyles, they ought to raise
advance care planning if they are to
achieve person-centered care that includes the values and preferences of
patients in medical
decision-making.
Our survey results show that lawyers
who regularly see clients about matters related to advance planning, such as
making a will, believe
that discussing ACP is a significant part of their
professional role and they routinely raise the topic with their clients.
Concerns
about the emotional aspects of ACP conversations were not identified as
barriers. This may reflect differences in the physical and
psychological
environment of a law office compared to a medical setting. When a care provider
raises ACP in hospital, the immediacy
and gravity of incapacity and end of life
choices may have a more potent emotional impact for the practitioner and the
patient. However,
as Lewis and colleagues suggest, “the timing of
broaching the subject of ACP does not have to be at the vulnerable moment of
irreversible crisis. It is more productive to discuss ACDs before the terminal
stages, during routine examinations before drastic
decisions are
required.”[29]
Another
possible difference between legal and health professionals is that lawyers may
see ACP as an empowering act for clients and
an important way for clients to
protect their interests, both in terms of what happens to their property and
what happens to their
body. In contrast, healthcare professionals may worry
that ACP distresses clients and takes away their hope, despite evidence that
a
majority of elderly and frail people want to discuss end of life
care.[30] The relationship between a
lawyer and client is a highly confidential one and, as in the doctor-patient
relationship, the promise
and expectation of confidentiality are important to
encouraging open communication. Client reluctance to share personal details with
lawyers was not reported as a frequent barrier to ACP discussions. Lawyers are
also trained to elicit and take instructions from
their clients and the nature
of this professional obligation means lawyers must raise potentially sensitive
topics to determine what
the client wants, then express these instructions in
legal documents. In healthcare settings, there is evidence of persistent
deference
to medical authority where patients and family members rely on a
doctor’s advice of the best course of
action.[31]
There has been
criticism that lawyers are too transactional in their approach to advance
planning and focus merely on the preparation
of
documents.[32] Our results show that
lawyers do encourage conversations between their clients and key people who need
to know the person’s
wishes, including their appointed decision maker,
family members and friends. Our respondents had confidence in the value of ACP
for their clients and some of the lawyers we consulted in focus groups to
develop the survey were alarmed by anecdotal accounts that
advance directives
were not always followed in practice. Lawyers were also concerned to learn that
statements in advance directives
are not always relevant to subsequent medical
situations. This may reflect lawyers’ distance from the practical reality
of
healthcare delivery and the complexity of decision-making when a client
becomes seriously ill and end of life care choices need to
be made.
Professional siloes
Our survey results exposed the siloed
nature of legal and healthcare practice. Surprisingly, it is not standard
practice for lawyers
to encourage their clients to discuss their healthcare
wishes with their doctor. Lawyers also do not see liaising with healthcare
providers as part of their professional role. While the time and cost of
advising clients about planning for future incapacity was
not a barrier to ACP
discussions, these factors may be an impediment to greater collaboration between
legal and health professionals.
A lawyer who spends time making contact with a
client’s healthcare provider will typically charge a client more for that
service
and public funding for health services in Canada does not include
reimbursement for this type of medical-legal collaboration. The
siloes between
legal and medical expertise may contribute to some of the known deficiencies
with ACP; for example, directives may
be held by lawyers and the client, but not
produced to healthcare providers when needed.
We have argued elsewhere
for a framework for action on health-legal collaboration to support
ACP.[33] We call for legal and
health practitioners to use common best practices to assist their clients,
cooperate in interprofessional training
and, where feasible, offer joint ACP
clinics to clients and even move to integrating legal professionals into
healthcare teams. An
important first step is to meet lawyers’ needs for
resources that can help them more effectively assist their clients with
planning
for future healthcare.
The need for resources
Our
respondents reported a strong interest in resources to assist them with ACP
consultations. Clients’ lack of preparedness
is a commonly cited barrier
by lawyers and healthcare providers alike and resources like worksheets can help
clients think about
and articulate their wishes. This could improve the
comprehensiveness of instructions that clients give to their lawyers and enhance
the quality of documents that lawyers draft for their clients. Resources to
increase lawyers’ knowledge of health system policies
and procedures, as
well as basic educational materials on medical terminology and treatments, would
also help to bridge the divide
between legal and healthcare domains of practice.
Strategies developed to promote ACP and the sharing of documents
(Alberta’s
Green Sleeve initiative, for
example)[34] should be communicated
to lawyers since they are important advisors for clients on organizing their
affairs and planning for future
incapacity and death. Organizations that develop
and disseminate ACP resources should liaise with legal professional associations
about lawyers’ needs and those associations can themselves provide further
continuing professional education on ACP.
Strengths, limitations and
implications for research and practice
To our knowledge, this is the
first survey of lawyers on their practices in relation to ACP. Our respondents
represent experienced
professionals who regularly assist clients with ACP. The
response rate was low, but higher than what the Law Society suggested we
could
expect. Our survey was promoted during a period when lawyers also received
numerous communications from the Law Society about
volunteering to support
residents and lawyers evacuated from a city that was severely affected by a
wildfire that swept the area
and destroyed over 2,000 homes and buildings. The
urgency of this appeal may have overshadowed our survey.
The findings
reflect the practices and attitudes of lawyers in one Canadian province, but
having worked extensively with the legal
profession and other stakeholders in
the survey development, we hope to use it collect data in at least three other
Canadian provinces.
Previous studies note that barriers and enablers to ACP
exist in three domains: client/patient; professional/provider; and system
level.
Our survey focused on the lawyer and client domains, and future research could
explore system-level factors that influence
legal practice, as well as barriers
and enablers to collaboration among health and legal professions to provide more
integrated supports
for ACP.
There is also a need for more in-depth
research about lawyers’ practices. For example, a majority of our survey
respondents
said they use a template for ACD. The source, content and user
experiences with such templates – both lawyers and clients –
are
areas for further investigation. Studies elsewhere have shown that the quality
of such templates may be a concern. In Germany,
Becker et al found that lawyers
who downloaded templates from the Internet rarely modified them to deal with
their clients’
particular
circumstances.[35] It has been
observed that directives in legalistic and complicated language are unlikely to
influence treatment
decisions.[36]
It is
important to investigate whether the documents that lawyers prepare accurately
reflect their clients’ wishes and whether
clients understand the
documents. Nauck and colleagues interviewed 53 people who had recently completed
advance directives and compared
what the people said they wanted with what was
recorded in the directive.[37] They
found that AD templates often used vague phrases (e.g. ‘to die with
dignity’) and were rarely tailored to reflect
the circumstances of the
individual making the directive. A qualitative study of doctors’
experiences of using advance directive
templates found that doctors viewed the
form as a tool to start a conversation, with some “explicitly claim[ing]
that it is
not the form, but the conversation itself that matters to
them.”[38] It appears lawyers,
trained to draft legal documents, place emphasis on the completion of documents
and then, to some degree, encourage
their clients to have conversations with
their loved ones.
Just under half of our respondents reported that they
feel they lack adequate information about medical aspects of ACP. In turn, their
clients may be ill-informed as well, especially if they do not discuss their
directive with a doctor. Nauck et al found that many
people who had made an AD
“had a poor knowledge of particular clinical situations and the relevance
of potential measures.”[39]
Thorevska et al reported similar results:
This study suggests that patients with living wills did not understand the
life-sustaining therapies mentioned in their advance directives.
Their
preferences for CPR and mechanical ventilation changed when they were provided
with American Thoracic Society–approved
information. This study confirms
that patients with living wills did not fully understand them and had
end-of-life wishes that were
not reflected fully in their documents. Patients
drafted their living wills with the assistance of lawyers and family members,
but
physicians were generally left out of the process. This is 1 potential
explanation for poor understanding of the medical issues (i.e.
understanding of
terminal illness, end-of-life scenarios, and life-sustaining therapies) in which
advance directives are
applicable.[40]
Lawyers in
our survey reported that diagnosis with a life-limiting illness or declining
health were common reasons for clients wanting
to engage in ACP and it is worth
investigating whether their specific illness is addressed in their directive.
Nauck et al found
that people with chronic or terminal illness did not mention
“their existing disease in their AD” nor did they go “beyond
considering commonly faced scenarios such as artificial nutrition/hydration or
being in pain or a coma. Probable end-of-life scenarios
relating to their
disease were not
discussed.”[41]
Finally,
studies should follow up people who make advance directives and appoint decision
makers to determine the impact of their
efforts to plan for what happens to them
in the future. As Biondo et al point out: “Clearly the goal of ACP is not
simply to
encourage conversations but to ensure that care received is in line
with patients’ wishes and
preferences.”[42]
Conclusion
The wealth of literature on ACP in health
contexts is an important body of knowledge that reveals current practices and
investigates
strategies that can overcome barriers to improve the uptake of ACP
and decision-making that accords with patients’ wishes.
We believe that a
similar evidence base needs to be developed for other professionals involved in
promoting and assisting clients
with ACP. This study of lawyers is an important
step in this direction.
APPENDIX 1: Detailed Survey Results
Factors that motivate client engagement with ACP
Question: Typically, from your experience, what prompts a client’s
desire to engage in advance care planning?
|
||||||
|
Never
|
Seldom
|
Sometimes
|
Often
|
Always
|
Don’t know/not sure
|
The lawyer brings it up as part of a discussion about wills, power of
attorney, etc. with the client (n=96)
|
0
|
1, 1.0%
|
7, 7.3%
|
44, 45.8%
|
43, 44.8%
|
1, 1.0%
|
The client has received a medical diagnosis with life limiting
implications and/or is experiencing deteriorating health (n=93)
|
5, 5.4%
|
18, 19.4%
|
53, 57.0%
|
15, 16.1%
|
1, 1.1%
|
1, 1.1%
|
The client has had a discussion with physician or other health care
provider (n=91)
|
5, 5.5%
|
32, 35.2%
|
41, 45.1%
|
8, 8.8%
|
0, 0.0%
|
5, 5.5%
|
The client is required to do ACP by residential facility (e.g. nursing
home, supportive living) (n=93)
|
10, 10.8%
|
24, 25.8%
|
41, 44.1%
|
14, 15.1%
|
1, 1.1%
|
3, 3.2%
|
The client has had a discussion with financial planner, banker,
insurance advisor (n=94)
|
3, 3.2%
|
23, 24.5%
|
40, 42.6%
|
26, 27.7%
|
0, 0.0%
|
2, 2.1%
|
The client has had a discussion with a spiritual advisor
(n=89)
|
36, 40.4%
|
31, 34.8%
|
11, 12.4%
|
2, 2.2%
|
0, 0.0%
|
9, 10.1%
|
The client has had experience as caregiver or agent to another
|
3, 3.2%
|
11, 11.7%
|
56, 59.6%
|
22, 23.4%
|
1, 1.1%
|
1, 1.1%
|
There has been an illness or death of someone close to client
(n=93)
|
1, 1.1%
|
10, 10.8%
|
55, 59.1%
|
27, 29.0%
|
0, 0.0%
|
0, 0.0%
|
Topics lawyers discuss with clients
Question: When you assist clients with planning for future health care,
how often do you discuss or provide guidance about:
|
||||||
|
Never
|
Seldom
|
Sometimes
|
Often
|
Always
|
Don’t know/not sure
|
Selecting an agent (n=88) [Note: an agent is a person appointed to make
health and personal decisions]
|
0, 0.0%
|
0
|
6, 6.8%
|
17, 19.3%
|
65, 73.9%
|
0, 0.0%
|
Their values and wishes concerning future care (e.g., religious or
lifestyle beliefs important to the client that they want others
to acknowledge
and respect) (n=93)
|
0, 0.0%
|
1, 1.1%
|
11, 11.8%
|
29, 31.2%
|
51, 54.8%
|
1, 1.1%
|
Their wishes about whether they would accept or refuse particular
healthcare interventions (e.g., cardiopulmonary resuscitation, mechanical
ventilation, tube feeding, kidney dialysis) (n=93)
|
2, 2.2%
|
9, 9.7%
|
11, 11.8%
|
21, 22.6%
|
49, 52.7%
|
1, 1.1%
|
Their wishes about future accommodation/living arrangements
(n=93)
|
3, 3.2%
|
15, 16.1%
|
19, 20.4%
|
24, 25.8%
|
32, 34.4%
|
0, 0.0%
|
Their wishes for who should be involved in consultations with the
client's health care team (n=93)
|
2, 2.2%
|
7, 7.5%
|
7, 7.5%
|
23, 24.7%
|
54, 58.1%
|
0, 0.0%
|
Their wishes for who should have access to their health-related records
(n=92)
|
5, 5.4%
|
17, 18.5%
|
18, 19.6%
|
20, 21.7%
|
32, 34.8%
|
0, 0.0%
|
Their wishes about participation in medical research (n=93)
|
15, 16.1%
|
19, 20.4%
|
19, 20.4%
|
14, 15.1%
|
26, 28.0%
|
0, 0.0%
|
Their wishes about organ donation (n=92)
|
7, 7.6%
|
14, 15.2%),
|
16, 17.4%
|
16, 17.4%
|
39, 42.4%
|
0, 0.0%
|
Barriers to assisting clients with ACP
Question: How much do the following factors hinder you in assisting your
clients with ACP? (n=89)
|
||||||
|
Never
|
Seldom
|
Sometimes
|
Often
|
Always
|
Don’t know/not sure
|
Concerns about upsetting the client
|
45, 50.6%
|
28, 31.5%
|
12, 13.5%
|
4, 4.5%
|
0
|
0
|
Conversations are upsetting or uncomfortable for me
|
63, 70.8%
|
21, 23.6%
|
4, 4.5%
|
0
|
0
|
1, 1.1%
|
Client is unwilling to share personal details with me
|
15, 16.9%
|
34, 38.2%
|
31, 34.8%
|
8, 9.0%
|
0
|
1, 1.1%
|
Differences between the client and me in age, cultural, religious or
other personal characteristics
|
43, 48.3%
|
34, 38.2%
|
10, 11.2%
|
1, 1.1%
|
0
|
1, 1.1%
|
Lack of client preparedness for advance care planning
|
13, 14.6%
|
10, 11.2%
|
45, 50.6%
|
20, 22.5%
|
0
|
1, 1.1%
|
My lack of knowledge about medical aspects of advance care planning
(e.g., lack of knowledge about medical interventions and their
implications for
a client)
|
25, 28.1%
|
21, 23.6%
|
25, 28.1%
|
9, 10.1%
|
6, 6.7%
|
3, 3.4%
|
My lack of knowledge about health sector policies/practices
(n=88)
|
25, 28.4%
|
16, 18.2%
|
27, 30.7%
|
13, 14.8%
|
3, 3.4%
|
4, 4.5%
|
It is time-consuming (and therefore costly) to have advance care
planning conversations with clients
|
43, 48.3%
|
29, 32.6%
|
10, 11.2%
|
6, 6.7%
|
1, 1.1%
|
0
|
Concerns that an advance care plan will not be used in
practice
|
49, 55.1%
|
19, 21.3%
|
14, 15.7%
|
2, 2.2%
|
1, 1.1%
|
4, 4.5%
|
My lack of experience with law in this area
|
62, 69.7%
|
17, 19.1%
|
8, 9.0%
|
2, 2.2%
|
0
|
0
|
[1] A Brinkman-Stoppelenburg, J
Rietjens and A van der Heide, “The Effects of Advance Care Planning on
End-of-Life Care: A Systematic
Review” (2014) 28(8) Palliative Medicine
1000; C Houben et al, “Efficacy of Advance Care Planning: A Systematic
Review
and Meta-Analysis” (2014) 15(7) Journal of the American Medical
Directors Association 477; HD Lum, RL Sudore and DB Bekelman,
“Advance
Care Planning in the Elderly” (2015) 99(2) The Medical Clinics of North
America 391.
[2] J Chiarchiaro, P
Buddadhumaruk, RM Arnold and DB White, “Prior Advance Care Planning is
Associated with Less Decisional Conflict
Among Surrogates for Critically Ill
Patients” (2015) 12 Annals of the American Thoracic Society
1528-1533.
[3] R O’Sullivan,
K Mailo, R Angeles and G Agarwal, “Advance Directives: Survey of Primary
Care Patients” (2015) 61(4)
Canadian Family Physician
353.
[4] A De Vleminck et al,
“Barriers and Facilitators for General Practitioners to Engage in Advance
Care Planning: A Systematic
Review” (2013) 31(4) Scandinavian Journal of
Primary Health Care 215; NA Hagen et al, “Advance Care Planning:
Identifying
System-Specific Barriers and Facilitators” (2015) 22(4)
Current Oncology 237; S. Lund, A Richardson and C May, “Barriers
to
Advance Care Planning at the End of Life: An Explanatory Systematic Review of
Implementation Studies” (2015) 10(2) PLoS
One
1.
[5] RS Martin, B Hayes, K
Gregorevic and WK Lim, “The Effects of Advance Care Planning Interventions
on Nursing Home Residents:
A Systematic Review” (2016) 17(4) Journal of
the American Medical Directors Association
284.
[6] Ibid. See also P Biondo,
LD Lee, SN Davison and JE Simon, “How Healthcare Systems Evaluation their
Advance Care Planning Initiatives:
Results from a Systematic Review”
(2016) 30(8) Palliative Medicine
720.
[7] Institute of Medicine,
Dying in America: Improving Quality and Honoring Individual Preferences Near
the End of Life (National Academies Press, Washington, 2014)
3-6.
[8] D Goodridge, E Quinlan, R
Venne, P Hunter and D Surtees, “Planning for Serious Illness by the
General Public: A Population-Based
Survey” (2013) ISRN Family Medicine
483673, available at
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4041261/.
[9]
See O’Sullivan et al, supra note 3.
[10] D Heyland et al,
“Failure to Engage Hospitalized Elderly Patients and their Families in
Advance Care Planning” (2013)
173(9) JAMA Internal Medicine
778.
[11] M Tunzi, “Advance
Care Directives: Realities and Challenges in Central California” (2011)
22(3) Journal of Clinical Ethics
239.
[12] N Thorevska et al,
“Patients' Understanding of Advance Directives and Cardiopulmonary
Resuscitation” (2005) 20(1) Journal
of Critical Care
26.
[13] M Becker et al,
“Did you Seek Assistance for Writing your Advance Directive? A Qualitative
Study” (2010) 122 Wiener Klinische
Wochenschrift
620.
[14] Statistics Canada,
Chart 4: Proportion of the Population Aged 0 to 14 Years and 65 Years and
Older, July 1, 2015, Canada, Provinces and Territories, at http://www.statcan.gc.
ca/daily-quotidien/150929/cg-b004-eng.htm (last visited December 20,
2016).
[15] Alberta Health
Services, Conversations Matter – Advance Care Planning Goals of Care
Designation: A Guide for Making Health Care Decisions, at http://goals.conversations
matter.ca.
[16] Personal
Directives Act RSA 2000, c
P-6.
[17] Alberta Human Services,
Write a Personal Directive, at http://www.humanservices.
alberta.ca/guardianship-trusteeship/write-a-personal-directive.html.
[18]
Alberta Human Services, Register a Personal Directive, at http://www.humanservices.
alberta.ca/guardianship-trusteeship/register-a-personal-directive.html.
[19]
Powers of Attorney Act RSA 2000, c
P-20.
[20] S Michie et al,
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Practice: A Consensus Approach” (2005)
14 Quality & Safety in Health
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[21] See also Hagen et
al, supra note 4.
[22] The
Canadian Bar Association, at
https://www.cba.org/Home.
[23]
Ontario Ministry of the Attorney General, The Office of the Public Guardian
and Trustee (OPGT), at
https://www.attorneygeneral.jus.gov.on.ca/english/family/pgt/.
[24]
Several researchers in Canada are investigating strategies to increase the
uptake of advance directives both for healthcare and research
participation. See
G Bravo et al, “Promoting Advance Planning for Health Care and Research
Among Older Adults: A Randomized
Controlled Trial” (2012) 13 BMC Medical
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[25]
For more information, see My Health Alberta, Advance Care Planning:
Conversations Matter, at
https://myhealth.alberta.ca/Alberta/Pages/advance-care-planning-conversation-matters.aspx.
[26]
Legal Education Society of Alberta, at
https://www.lesaonline.org.
[27]
S Lund, A Richardson and C May, “Barriers to Advance Care Planning at the
End of Life: An Explanatory Systematic Review of
Implementation Studies”
(2015) 10(2) PLos One 12.
[28] J
Rhee, N Zwar and L Kemp, “Uptake and Implementation of Advance Care
Planning in Australia: Findings of Key Informant Interviews”
(2012) 36
Australian Health Review 98 at
100.
[29] E Lewis et al,
“Evidence Still Insufficient that Advance Care Documentation Leads to
Engagement of Healthcare Professionals
in End-of-Life Discussions: A Systematic
Review” (2016) 30(9) Palliative Medicine 807 at
816.
[30] T Sharp, E Moran, I
Kuhn and S Barclay, “Do the Elderly Have a Voice? Advance Care Planning
Discussions with Frail and Older
Individuals: A Systematic Literature Review and
Narrative Synthesis” (2013) 63(615) The British Journal of General
Practice
657.
[31] M Olding et
al, “Patient and Family Involvement in Adult Critical and Intensive Care
Settings: A Scoping Review” (2016)
19(6) Health Expectations
1183.
[32] L Castillo,
“Lost in Translation: The Unintended Consequences of Advance Directive Law
on Clinical Care” (2011) 154(2)
Annals of Internal Medicine
121.
[33] NM Ries, M Douglas, J
Simon and K Fassbender, “Doctors, Lawyers and Advance Care Planning: Time
for Innovation to Work Together
to Meet Client Needs” (2016) 12(2)
Healthcare Policy 12.
[34] See My
Health Alberta, supra note
25.
[35] See Becker et al, supra
note 13.
[36] NA Halpern et al,
“Advance Directives in an Oncologic Intensive Care Unit: A Contemporary
Analysis of Their Frequency, Type
and Impact” (2011) 14(4) Journal of
Palliative Medicine 483.
[37] F
Nauck et al, “To What Extent Are the Wishes of a Signatory Reflected in
Their Advance Directive: A Qualitative Analysis”
(2014) 15 BMC Medical
Ethics 52.
[38] IC Otte et al,
“The Utility of Standardized Advance Directives: The General
Practitioners’ Perspective” (2016)
19 Medicine, Health Care and
Philosophy 199.
[39] Nauck et al,
supra note 37, at 8.
[40] See
Thorevska et al, supra note
12.
[41] See Nauck et al, supra
note 37, at 8.
[42] See Biondo et
al, supra note 6.
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