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Ever Arrested (% Yes)

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Title: Ever Arrested (% Yes) Author: jtm9p Last modified by: Geer, Juanita (jlg6xv) Created Date: 1/5/2004 2:43:18 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ever Arrested (% Yes)


1
Psychiatric Advance Directives Perspectives
and Research Highlights
Jeff Swanson Marvin Swartz (with help from
Richard Bonnie)
Department of Psychiatry Behavioral
Sciences Duke University School of Medicine
Acknowledgment Support from the National
Institute of Mental Health, the John D. and
Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation, the Greenwall
Foundation, and the National Resource Center on
Psychiatric Advance Directives (NRC-PAD)
www.nrc-pad.org
2
(No Transcript)
3
Increasing interest in Psychiatric Advance
Directives (PADs) in the US new laws in 25
states since 1991
PENNSYLVANIA MONTANA NEW JERSEY NORTH
CAROLINA OREGON OHIO OKLAHOMA SOUTH
DAKOTA TEXAS UTAH WASHINGTON WYOMING
NEW MEXICO
ALASKA ARIZONA HAWAII IDAHO INDIANA
ILLINOIS KENTUCKY LOUISIANA MAINE
MARYLAND MICHIGAN MINNESOTA
4
PAD prevalence
and latent demand
Would you want to complete a PAD if someone
showed you how and helped you do it?
100
65.50 77.45 said yes.
75
2004 MacArthur Network Survey of 1,011
psychiatric outpatients Have you completed a
mental health advance instruction or appointed a
health care agent?
50
3.90 12.87 said yes.
25
0
Durham (n204)
San Francisco (n200)
Tampa (n202)
Worcester (n200)
Chicago (n205)
5
High latent demand for PADs but low completion
rates
  • Problem Why dont people complete PADs? (What
    are the barriers?)
  • Dont know enough about PADs
  • No one to help with the mechanics of completing
    the document
  • Dont trust anyone to appoint as proxy
    decisionmaker
  • Proposed solution Facilitated Psychiatric
    Advance Directive Intervention
  • 60-90 minute structured, manualized session with
    trained facilitator.
  • Educate and assist consumer in completing legal
    Advance Instruction and/or Health Care Power of
    Attorney

6
Research questions
  • Does PAD facilitation work for people with
    serious mental illness? (Will they complete
    PADs?)
  • Assuming consumers do complete PADs, what do the
    documents contain? (Are PAD instructions
    feasible and consistent with clinical practice
    standards?)
  • Do PADs work as intended? (And might they have
    other, indirect benefits?)
  • How do PADs interact with other leverages?

7
Design of core study Effectively Implementing
PADs (R01 MH63949 and MacArthur Network funded)
  • Enrolled sample of 469 patients with serious
    mental illness from 2 county outpatient mental
    health centers and 1 regional state psychiatric
    hospital in North Carolina
  • Random assignment
  • 1. Experimental group Facilitated Psychiatric
    Advance Directive (F-PAD) (n239)
  • 2. Control group receive written information
    about PADs and referral to existing resources
    (n230)
  • Structured interview assessments at baseline, 1
    month, 6 months, 12 months, 24 months record
    reviews

8
F-PAD study outcomes
  • Short-term outcomes
  • PAD completion rate
  • PAD document structure content
  • Intermediate outcomes
  • Outpatient treatment engagement
  • Working alliance with clinicians
  • Long-range outcomes
  • Reduce MH crises
  • Reduce coercive crisis interventions and
    involuntary treatment

9
Key findings PAD completion and document content
  • Completion Intervention group participants
    significantly more likely to complete PADs
  • (61 vs. 3.)
  • PAD structure 71 of PADs combined the
    instructional directive with health care power of
    attorney.

10
Key findings PAD completion and document content
(cont.)
  • Prescriptive vs. proscriptive function Almost
    all PADs included treatment requests as well as
    refusals, but no participant used a PAD to refuse
    all medications and/or treatment.
  • Concordance with standard care PAD instructions
    were systematically rated by psychiatrists, and
    mostly found to be feasible and consistent with
    clinical practice standards.

11
Key findings outpatient treatment engagement
  • At 1 month follow-up, F-PAD participants
  • Significantly greater positive change in working
    alliance with case managers and clinicians
    (adjusted OR1.67)
  • Significantly more likely to report receiving
    mental health services they felt they needed
    (adjusted OR1.57)

12
Key findings outpatient treatment engagement
(cont.)
  • At 6 months follow-up, PAD completers had
  • Significantly greater improvement on treatment
    satisfaction scale (Mental Health Support
    ProgramMHSPscale)
  • Adjusted OR1.71 for top quartile
  • As the result of services I received, I deal
    more effectively with daily problemsI am better
    able to control my lifeI am getting along better
    with my familyI do better in school and/or
    work.

13
Key findings outpatient treatment engagement
(cont.)
  • At 6 months follow-up, PAD completers had
  • higher utilization of outpatient services
  • medication management visits (probability 41 vs.
    33 per month)
  • outpatient crisis prevention visits (probability
    19 vs. 10 per month)
  • At 12 months, PAD completers had significantly
    increased concordance between requested and
    prescribed meds.

14
Key findings prevention of crises and coercion
  • By 6 months follow-up, PAD completers had fewer
    crisis episodes (adjusted OR0.46)
  • At 24 months, PAD completers had reduced
    likelihood of coercive crisis interventions
    (adjusted OR0.50)
  • Controlled (weighted) for propensity to complete
    PAD.

15
Adjusted predicted probability1 of any coercive
crisis interventions at follow-up for psychiatric
advance directive (PAD) completers and
noncompleters, by any episode of decisional
incapacity within period
Incapacity, no PAD Incapacity, with PAD No
incapacity, no PAD No incapacity, with PAD
Predicted Probability
12 months
24 months
6 months
Follow-up wave
1 Estimates produced from GEE regression Model 2
(see Table II).
16
Adjusted predicted probability1 of any coercive
crisis interventions at follow-up for psychiatric
advance directive (PAD) completers and
noncompleters, by any episode of decisional
incapacity within period
Incapacity, no PAD Incapacity, with PAD No
incapacity, no PAD No incapacity, with PAD
Completing a Facilitated PAD reduced by about 50
the chance of any coercive crisis intervention
over 24 months Adjusted Odds Ratio 0.50
(plt0.05)
Predicted Probability
12 months
24 months
6 months
Follow-up wave
1 Estimates produced from GEE regression Model 2
(see Table II).
17

History of coercion in PAD study participants
Lifetime prevalence of coercive crisis
interventions
Type of intervention Percent
Police transport to treatment 67.78
Placed in handcuffs 41.84
Involuntary commitment 61.09
Seclusion on locked unit 49.79
Physical restraints used 37.66
Forced medications 33.89
Any coercive crisis intervention 82.43
18
Summary of key findings
  • Large latent demand but low completion of
    psychiatric advance directives among public
    mental health consumers in the USA
  • Structured facilitation (F-PAD) can overcome most
    of these barriers Most consumers offered
    facilitation complete legal PADs.
  • Completed facilitated PADs tend to contain useful
    information and are consistent with clinical
    practice standards

19
Summary of key findings (cont.)
  • Even though PADs are designed legally to
    determine treatment during incapacitating crises,
    they can have an indirect benefit of improving
    engagement in outpatient treatment process.
  • PADs can help prevent crises as well as reduce
    the use of coercion when crises occur.
  • PADs may have their greatest impact for people
    under other forms of leveraged treatment.

20
How an instructional PAD can work
  • I didn't ever want to receive ECT again. I had
    received it back in 2001 and it really messed me
    up This time, with a PAD I did not receive any
    treatments that I did not want. They were very
    respectful.I really felt like the hospital took
    better care of me because I had my PAD. In fact,
    I think it's the best care that I've ever
    received.

21
How an instructional PAD can work
  • The doctor didn't treat me like a nut case
    because some hospitals do. He said You've got
    rights and it's great that you know you have
    them. He said to me, Now you know your rights
    and we'll try to respect those completelyAnd he
    did a lot for my health too.
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