Reducing Racial Disparities at End-of-life: Using Narratives to Build Trust and Promote advance Care Planning.

Donna Ewy
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Abstract

Black Americans are less likely than White Americans to have advance directives, die while receiving hospice services, or have their end-of life wishes honored. The root causes of disparities include imbalance of resources, lack of trust in health care institutions, lack of adequate education regarding end-of-life options, communication differences of health care providers with black vs white patients, variable access to hospice services in different communities, and poorer pain management for Black patients compared to White patients. Because root causes are numerous, comprehensive solutions are required. When advance care planning is in place, people are more likely to choose care focused on priorities and comfort than on seeking aggressive, sometimes futile, interventions in the last weeks of life. One important component of the solution should include listening to narrative stories of Black people as they encounter life-limiting diagnoses. Gathering the stories about life events and how strength was found through adversities can be a tool for growing trusting relationships and engaging in shared decision-making. Health care professionals should invite Black patients with serious illnesses to explore the sources of their strengths and identify their core values to work toward developing directives for the nature and place of their end-of-life and help to mitigate disparities in high quality end-of-life care.

减少生命末期的种族差异:利用叙述建立信任并促进预先护理规划。
美国黑人比美国白人更不可能有预先指示、在接受临终关怀服务时死亡或其临终愿望得到尊重。造成差异的根本原因包括资源不平衡、对医疗机构缺乏信任、缺乏有关生命末期选择的充分教育、医疗服务提供者与黑人和白人患者之间的沟通差异、不同社区获得安宁疗护服务的机会不同,以及黑人患者的疼痛管理比白人患者差。由于根源众多,因此需要全面的解决方案。如果预先制定了护理计划,那么在生命的最后几周,人们更有可能选择以优先和舒适为重点的护理,而不是寻求积极的、有时是徒劳的干预。解决方案的一个重要组成部分应包括倾听黑人在遭遇生命极限诊断时的叙事故事。收集有关生命事件以及如何在逆境中找到力量的故事,可以成为增进信任关系和参与共同决策的工具。医疗保健专业人员应邀请身患重病的黑人患者探索他们的力量源泉,并确定他们的核心价值观,以便为他们生命终结的性质和地点制定指令,并帮助减少高质量生命终结护理方面的差异。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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