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@ARTICLE{Athanasiadi:281643,
author = {Athanasiadi, Ermioni and Thyrian, Jochen René and Florack,
Janina and Theile-Schürholz, Anna and Karneboge, Jonas and
Müller, Tanja and Kleinke, Kristian and Kremer, Stefanie
and Boes, Charlotte and Böhm, Helene and
Herder-Peyrounette, Anja and Kremer, Manuela and Sander,
Celina and Müller-Späth, Ronja and Ullrich, Heiko and
Boekholt, Melanie and Hassenzahl, Marc and Albers, Ruben and
Forstmeier, Simon and Schaper, Philipp and Haberstroh,
Julia},
title = {{P}roject {DECIDE} {II}: evaluating the efficacy of
supported advance care decision making within routine care
in dementia: a randomized controlled trial.},
journal = {BMC medical ethics},
volume = {26},
number = {1},
issn = {1472-6939},
address = {London},
publisher = {BioMed Central},
reportid = {DZNE-2025-01161},
pages = {124},
year = {2025},
note = {Trial registration: DRKS00036478, 17.04.2025.},
abstract = {BackgroundDementia is a terminal illness and places
significant burden on individuals and their caregivers,
especially regarding end-of-life decisions for people with
dementia (PwD) who lose their decision-making capacity.
Current advance healthcare planning concepts fail to
consider the psychological processes of decision making.
Supported Advance Care Decision-Making (ACD) is a promising
approach aiming to enrich existing advance healthcare
planning concepts by integrating empowering support
strategies and ensuring the success of empowerment. The
study aims at providing a feasible and effective approach to
enhance ACD in dementia care practice with the goal to
increase PwD’s autonomy in making advance care and
end-of-life decisions and to reduce proxy burden. It is
embedded within Dementia Care Management (DeCM), a routine
care measure specifically designed for PwD who live at
home.MethodsThe efficacy of supported ACD incorporated in
DeCM routine care will be investigated with a single-blind
randomized controlled trial. The primary endpoints are the
prevalence and validity of advance healthcare planning
documents (advance directives or other) and proxy burden at
pre vs. post measurement. The secondary endpoints are
decisional conflict, patient autonomy, and patient-proxy
congruence in preferences.DiscussionDepending on the
results, supported ACD shall be added to the curriculum of
DeCM to further increase its effectiveness.},
keywords = {Dementia care (Other) / Intervention (Other) / Proxy burden
(Other) / Supported advance care decision-making (Other)},
cin = {AG Thyrian},
ddc = {610},
cid = {I:(DE-2719)1510800},
pnm = {353 - Clinical and Health Care Research (POF4-353)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF4-353},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
pubmed = {pmid:41063207},
doi = {10.1186/s12910-025-01290-6},
url = {https://pub.dzne.de/record/281643},
}