A Representational Intervention to Promote Preparation for End-of-life Decision Making (SPIRIT)
End Stage Renal Disease
About this trial
This is an interventional supportive care trial for End Stage Renal Disease focused on measuring end stage renal disease, dialysis, end of life decision making, surrogate psychological morbidities
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
for patients,
- self-identified Caucasian or African American;
- receiving either center-hemodialysis or home-peritoneal dialysis for at least 6 months prior to enrollment;
- availability of an individual chosen by the patient who can be present during the intervention as a surrogate decision maker;
- age 18 years or older;
- ability to participate in health care decisions as evidenced by less than 3 errors on the Short Portable Mental Status Questionnaire (SPMSQ), suggesting normal mental functioning;
- ability to read, write, and speak English.
- a CCI score of ≥6;
- hospitalization in the last 6 months, a CCI score of 5, including congestive heart failure (CHF).
for surrogates,
- age 18 years or older (to serve as a surrogate decision maker, the individual must be an adult);
- willingness to serve as the surrogate decision maker and participate in the intervention with the patient;
- ability to read, write, and speak English.
Exclusion Criteria:
-Patients who are too sick to participate in an hour-long interview, who require special care and assistance, who would not be able to care for their needs will be excluded.
Sites / Locations
- University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
No Intervention
Experimental
control
SPIRIT intervention
Written information on advance directives and the patient's right to have an advance directive is provided to every patient on the first day of dialysis treatment by a social worker at the clinic. A social worker documents whether the patient has an advance directive, a surrogate decision maker, and/or a Do-Not-Resuscitate (DNR) Order on a Comprehensive Interdisciplinary Assessment form. The social worker encourages patients to complete an advance directive and addresses their questions about life-sustaining treatment options. If completed, the advance directive is placed in the medical record.
The SPIRIT intervention is a two-session, 1½ hour-long, structured intervention that is composed of six steps (assessing representations, identifying and exploring gaps and concerns, creating conditions for conceptual change, introducing replacement information, summarizing, and setting goals and planning), presented to both patient and surrogate by a trained nurse interventionist in a face-to-face interview format based on the representational approach.