Abstract

The desire to retain control over one's life until the end has become highly important in our society. Women and men of different ages and of diverse social, cultural, and educational backgrounds increasingly decide in advance about prospective medical treatment (Advance Care Planning, ACP). Identification and analysis of literature on advance care planning behavior of men and women in Germany. The focus is on gender-specific differences. Systematic review of empirical studies with gender-specific data on advance care planning behavior in Germany. In-depth analysis of 21 of the 479 retrieved articles. The analysis reveals that Advance Care Planning behavior is influenced by interacting factors such as gender, age, cultural and ethnic background, religion, and education. Gender alone does not explain the prevalence of ACP behavior. This prima facie negative result is partly due to the study designs. Heterogeneous data and a lack of gender sensitivity leave the question concerning the relationships between ACP behavior and gender mostly unanswered. The analyzed studies reduce gender to a dualistic classification system, dismiss individual role models and positions and also neglect geographic and cultural contexts. There is a need for studies sensitive to gender and culture.

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