Abstract

BackgroundHuntington’s disease (HD) has a poor prognosis. Decision-making capacity and communication ability may become lost as the disease progresses. Therefore, HD patients are encouraged to engage in advance care planning (ACP). To improve ACP for HD patients, there is a need to better understand how these patients face their poor prognosis.AimTo gain insight into the views of HD patients who receive outpatient care regarding their future and the way they deal with the poor prognosis of their disease.MethodsA qualitative study using semi-structured interviews with 12 patients with HD (7 outpatient clinic, 3 day care, 2 assisted living facility). Audio-recorded interviews were transcribed verbatim. Through reading and re-reading interviews, writing memos and discussions in the research team, strategies were identified.ResultsThree strategies emerged for facing a future with HD. Participants saw the future: 1) as a period that you have to prepare for; 2) as a period that you would rather not think about; 3) as a period that you do not have to worry about yet. Participants could adopt more than one strategy at a time. Even though participants realized that they would deteriorate and would need more care in the future, they tried to keep this knowledge ‘at a distance’, with the motivation of keeping daily life as manageable as possible.ConclusionsOfficial ACP guidelines recommend discussing goals and preferences for future treatment and care, but patients tend to want to live in the present. Further research is needed to elucidate the best approach to deal with this discrepancy.

Highlights

  • IntroductionDecision-making capacity and communication ability may become lost as the disease progresses

  • Huntington’s disease (HD) has a poor prognosis

  • Official advance care planning (ACP) guidelines recommend discussing goals and preferences for future treatment and care, but patients tend to want to live in the present

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Summary

Introduction

Decision-making capacity and communication ability may become lost as the disease progresses. HD patients are encouraged to engage in advance care planning (ACP). Patients with HD experience complex and unpredictable changes in their physical, cognitive, emotional and behavioral functioning. These symptoms lead to a decline in functional capacity and loss of independence, which require nursing care in the more advanced stages [2]. In HD, decision-making capacity and communication ability may become impaired or lost as the disease progresses. Patients are encouraged to engage in advance care planning (ACP) and draw up an advance directive early in the course of HD [3,4,5]. Advance directives concern treatment preferences, but in the Netherlands they may concern a request for euthanasia or physician assisted suicide (PAS), in line with the Euthanasia act of 2002 [8]

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