Just Released
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Poll: Family Members of Older Adults with Serious Illness Are More
Confident That They Know Their Medical Wishes When They Have Written
Documents
National
Survey Examines the Challenges Facing Americans with Serious Illness Late in
Life and How the Public is Preparing for Them
Most Seriously Ill Seniors
Struggle with Cognitive and Mental Health Challenges; Nearly Half Reportedly
Have Problems Understanding Drug and Medical Instructions
Seniors with serious illness and their families
are more likely to feel their wishes for medical care are being followed when
they have written them down, finds a new Kaiser Family Foundation survey on the public’s
views and experiences with illness in late life.
As America grows older
and more people face serious illness late in life that can limit their
ability to function, this new nationally representative survey provides an
in-depth look at how Americans prepare for and deal with such illness.
The survey finds that
family members who say their seriously ill older relative has a written
document outlining their wishes are more than twice as likely to say they
know exactly what they want for medical care than those without such a
document (53% versus 23%). Family members who say they talked with their
seriously ill relative about their wishes are more than three times as likely
than others to say they know exactly what they want (58% vs. 16%).
Similarly, seniors with serious illness themselves
and their family members are more likely to say that the ill person’s wishes
for medical care are being ‘very closely’ followed if the person has a
document describing their wishes than if they don’t (70% vs. 54%).
Most family members of
seniors with serious illness report their relative has a document describing
their wishes (60%) or a document naming someone to make medical decisions on
their behalf (70%). About one in five (22%) family members say they have
referred to the document outlining wishes for medical care, and nearly all of
this group say it was helpful when they did so.
The survey is the
first in a planned series that will track changes in attitudes and experiences
around serious late-life illness and includes nearly 1,000 seniors and family
members dealing with such illness. This survey considers older adults to be
seriously ill if they have at least one chronic condition and report
functional limitations due to a health or memory problem such as difficulty
preparing meals, shopping for groceries, taking medications, getting across a
room, eating, dressing, bathing, or using the toilet. Chronic conditions
include diabetes, lung disease, heart disease, cancer, Alzheimer’s disease,
dementia, depression, or chronic kidney disease or failure.
Other key findings related to seniors with
late-life illness include:
The survey also examines the broader public’s
views around aging and illness in late life.
Nearly all Americans,
regardless of age, say it is important for people to have written down their
wishes for medical care or who they would like to make decisions about their
medical care in case they become seriously ill.
Far fewer say they
themselves have a written document that describes their wishes for medical
care, such as the types of treatments they would or would not want to receive
(34%). Four in 10 (41%) say they have a written document that designates
someone to make medical decisions on their behalf if they’re no longer able
to make them on their own.
Those who are older
are much more likely to say they have these documents than younger people.
For example, seniors are three times as likely to say they have a written
document describing their wishes for medical care than adults under 30 years
old (58% compared to 17%).
There are also
differences across racial and ethnic groups. For example, Black seniors are
much less likely than White and Hispanic seniors to have written documents
outlining their medical wishes (19% of Blacks compared to 65% of Whites and
48% of Hispanics). This gap remains even when adjusting for differences in
education and other demographic factors.
The survey also looks
at some of the financial concerns people have about aging and serious illness
and finds about two thirds (65%) of the public say they are worried that they
will have trouble affording the medical care they need later in life if they
become seriously ill. Hispanics are more likely to report this concern (77%)
than are Whites (64%) and Blacks (62%).
Hispanics are also
more likely to report being worried about other financial matters related to
aging. For example, more Hispanics (63%) than Whites (37%) or Blacks (40%)
worry about leaving their families with debts when they die.
In addition to the
full survey report, four infographics are also available highlighting key
findings related to the challenges facing seniors with serious illness, the
steps people have taken to prepare for late-life illness, the impact of
documenting medical wishes, and differences in the views and experiences of
Blacks, Whites and Hispanics.
METHODOLOGY
Designed and analyzed
by public opinion researchers at the Kaiser Family Foundation, the Serious
Illness in Late Life Survey was conducted by telephone May 4 – July 12, 2017,
among a representative, random national sample of 2,040 adults. The survey
included 998 interviews with people who have experience with serious illness,
including 183 interviews with older adults who are personally seriously ill,
494 with family members of older adults currently living with serious
illness, and 321 with family members of older adults who recently died after
a period of serious illness. Interviews were conducted in English and Spanish
by landline (677) and cell phone (1,363). The margin of sampling error is
plus or minus 3 percentage points for the full sample, and plus or minus 4
percentage points for those with experience with serious illness. For results
based on other subgroups, the margin of sampling error may be higher. The
survey was funded through a grant from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation.
Filling
the need for trusted information on national health issues, the Kaiser Family Foundation is a nonprofit
organization based in Menlo Park, California.
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Thursday, November 2, 2017
Family Members of Older Adults with Serious Illness
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