• J Palliat Med · Oct 2010

    Multicenter Study

    Preferences of patients with advanced lung cancer regarding the involvement of family and others in medical decision-making.

    • Koen Pardon, Reginald Deschepper, Robert Vander Stichele, Jan L Bernheim, Freddy Mortier, Nathalie Bossuyt, Denis Schallier, Paul Germonpré, Daniella Galdermans, Willem Van Kerckhoven, Luc Deliens, and EOLIC-Consortium.
    • End-of-Life Care Research Group, Vrije Universiteit Brussel, Brussels, Belgium. koen.pardon@vub.ac.be
    • J Palliat Med. 2010 Oct 1;13(10):1199-203.

    ObjectiveTo explore the preferences of competent patients with advanced lung cancer regarding involvement of family and/or others in their medical decision-making, and their future preferences in case of loss of competence.MethodsOver 1 year, physicians in 13 hospitals in Flanders, Belgium, recruited patients with initial non-small–cell lung cancer, stage IIIb or IV. The patients were interviewed with a structured questionnaire every 2 months until the fourth interview and every 4 months until the sixth interview.ResultsAt inclusion, 128 patients were interviewed at least once; 13 were interviewed 6 consecutive times. Sixty-nine percent of patients wanted family members to be involved in medical decision-making and this percentage did not change significantly over time. One third of these patients did not achieve this preference. Ninety-four percent of patients wanted family involvement if they lost competence, 23% of these preferring primary physician control over decision-making, 41% shared physician and family control, and 36% primary family control. This degree of preferred family involvement expressed when competent did not change significantly over time at population level, but did at individual level; almost half the patients changed their minds either way at some point during the observation period.ConclusionsThe majority of patients with lung cancer wanted family involvement in decision-making, and almost all did so in case of future loss of competence. However, as half of the patients changed their minds over time about the degree of family involvement they wanted if they lost competence, physicians should regularly rediscuss a patient's preferences.

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