Do Life-sustaining Treatment Orders Match Patient and Surrogate Preferences? The Role of POLST

J Gen Intern Med. 2021 Feb;36(2):413-421. doi: 10.1007/s11606-020-06292-1. Epub 2020 Oct 27.

Abstract

Background: It is essential to high-quality medical care that life-sustaining treatment orders match the current, values-based preferences of patients or their surrogate decision-makers. It is unknown whether concordance between orders and current preferences is higher when a POLST form is used compared to standard documentation practices.

Objective: To assess concordance between existing orders and current preferences for nursing facility residents with and without POLST forms.

Design: Chart review and interviews.

Setting: Forty Indiana nursing facilities (29 where POLST is used and 11 where POLST is not in use).

Participants: One hundred sixty-one residents able to provide consent and 197 surrogate decision-makers of incapacitated residents with and without POLST forms.

Main measurements: Concordance was measured by comparing life-sustaining treatment orders in the medical record (e.g., orders about resuscitation, intubation, and hospitalization) with current preferences. Concordance was analyzed using population-averaged binary logistic regression. Inverse probability weighting techniques were used to account for non-response. We hypothesized that concordance would be higher in residents with POLST (n = 275) in comparison to residents without POLST (n = 83).

Key results: Concordance was higher for residents with POLST than without POLST (59.3% versus 34.9%). In a model adjusted for resident, surrogate, and facility characteristics, the odds were 3.05 times higher that residents with POLST had orders for life-sustaining treatment match current preferences in comparison to residents without POLST (OR 3.05 95% CI 1.67-5.58, p < 0.001). No other variables were significantly associated with concordance.

Conclusions: Nursing facility residents with POLST are significantly more likely than residents without POLST to have concordance between orders in their medical records and current preferences for life-sustaining treatments, increasing the likelihood that their treatment preferences will be known and honored. However, findings indicate further systems change and clinical training are needed to improve POLST concordance.

Keywords: advance care planning; nursing home; palliative care.

Publication types

  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural
  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Advance Care Planning*
  • Advance Directives*
  • Humans
  • Indiana
  • Nursing Homes
  • Resuscitation Orders