Journals of Gerontology Series A: Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences, Vol 54, Issue 5 M225-M229, Copyright © 1999 by The Gerontological Society of America
Nursing home resident use of care directives
DN Suri, BL Egleston, JA Brody and MA Rudberg
Department of Medicine, The University of Chicago, IL 60637, USA.
BACKGROUND: The Patient Self-Determination Act of 1991 requires that
nursing homes reimbursed by Medicare or Medicaid inform all residents upon
admission of their rights to enact care directives in the event of terminal
illness. This study investigated the relationship between care directive
use and resident functional status. METHODS: We analyzed a version of the
Minimum Data Set (MDS+) from a single state. We selected residents who were
admitted to a nursing home in the first half of 1993 and followed them in
the nursing home through the end of 1994. We created logistic models to
examine independent correlates associated with having an advance directive
or a do-not-resuscitate (DNR) order on admission. We then created similar
logistic models to examine independent correlates associated with writing
an advance directive or DNR order subsequent to admission. RESULTS: Of the
2,780 residents, 11% (292) had advance directives and 17% (466) had DNR
orders upon admission. Of those without care directives upon admission, 6%
(143) subsequently had an advance directive and 15% (339) subsequently had
a DNR order. Cross-sectionally, older individuals and whites were more
likely to have a care directive. Having poor cognitive and physical
function was associated with having a DNR order upon admission.
Longitudinally, longer stayers and whites were more likely to have an
advance directive. Residents who lost physical function were more likely to
have an advance directive and those who lost cognitive function were more
likely to have a DNR order. CONCLUSIONS: Care directive use is influenced
by a number of sociodemographic and functional characteristics.