Abstract

Advance care planning gives individuals with capacity the option of planning for their future, and anticipating future decision-making about their treatment or care should they then lose capacity. People with Parkinson's disease (PD) may develop significant physical and cognitive problems as the disease progresses, which creates a great need for, but significant challenges to, advance care planning. As a result, we set out to explore the views of people with PD and relatives on planning for the future and advance care planning. Qualitative study with semi-structured interviews of thirty-three people with PD and their relatives in the North-East of England. Interviewees with PD were generally not keen to engage with advance care planning in the present, in comparison to the future. Three main themes arose from the data in identifying why this may be the case: (1) 'Awareness'-which included the limited awareness on purpose of advance care planning and Parkinson's disease; (2) 'Uncertainty'-the uncertainty of living with PD and of life; and (3) 'Salience'-the complex decision-making processes that interviewees engaged in, which were highly variable. The use of advance care planning in PD is influenced by its perception amongst people with PD and their relatives. Health professionals have an important role in raising the salience of health care planning.

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