TY - JOUR T1 - Advance care planning in older dialysis patients: health care literacy qualitative study JF - BMJ Supportive & Palliative Care JO - BMJ Support Palliat Care DO - 10.1136/bmjspcare-2021-003398 SP - bmjspcare-2021-003398 AU - Julien O Riordan AU - P M Kane AU - Helen Noble AU - Andrew Smyth Y1 - 2021/10/10 UR - http://spcare.bmj.com/content/early/2021/10/10/bmjspcare-2021-003398.abstract N2 - Objectives Low health literacy among older adults is associated with limited engagement in end-of-life care plans, more hospitalisations and excess mortality. Frequently, older patients derive no survival benefit from dialysis and quality of life often deteriorates with dialysis. Older dialysis patients’ values and wishes are often unknown during key healthcare decision-making and many endure medically intensive end-of-life interventions . The objectives of this study were to examine older dialysis patients’ understanding of haemodialysis, their engagement in end-of-life care planning and their satisfaction with life on haemodialysis.Methods 15 older dialysis patients participated in qualitative semi-structured interviews in two haemodialysis units . Thematic saturation was reached. Thematic analysis, applied inductively, distilled the data.Results Themes identified included disempowerment which reflected limited health literacy, poor advance care planning compromised well-being and haemodialysis compromised their core values.Conclusion Health literacy among older dialysis patients appeared poor, patient empowerment was limited and participation in shared decision-making and advance care planning suboptimal. Consequently, complex healthcare decision-making, including haemodialysis may jeopardise patients’ core values. These findings have significant implications for the validity of the informed consent process prior to dialysis initiation. Improved health literacy through enhanced patient education and better communication skills for clinicians are necessary to promote patient participation in shared decision-making. Clinician training to facilitate discussion of patients’ values and wishes will help guide clinicians and patients towards healthcare decisions most concordant with individual core values. This will optimise patient-centred care.All data relevant to the study are included in the article. ER -