1. Living Will Status and Desire for Living Will Help Among Rural Alabama Veterans.
- Author
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Mahaney-Price, Ann F., Hilgeman, Michelle M., Davis, Lori L., McNeal, Sandre F., Conner, Charles M., and Allen, Rebecca S.
- Subjects
CHI-squared test ,CHRONIC diseases ,STATISTICAL correlation ,DECISION making ,FUNCTIONAL assessment ,HEALTH status indicators ,HELP-seeking behavior ,HEALTH insurance ,VETERANS ,RESEARCH methodology ,MEDICAL cooperation ,PATIENT-professional relations ,PATIENTS ,PROBABILITY theory ,RESEARCH ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH funding ,RURAL conditions ,SCALE analysis (Psychology) ,SELF-evaluation ,T-test (Statistics) ,TERMINAL care ,TRUST ,VETERANS' hospitals ,ADVANCE directives (Medical care) ,LOGISTIC regression analysis ,MULTIPLE regression analysis ,SECONDARY analysis ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,RANDOMIZED controlled trials ,LIVING wills ,DATA analysis software ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ODDS ratio - Abstract
The purpose of this secondary analysis of data from an earlier intervention study to increase Veterans Administration health care enrollment in rural Alabama veterans was to determine the veterans' living will status, desire for help completing a living will, and relationships between these and demographic, health insurance, health self-report, cumulative illness, disability, and trust characteristics. Baseline data for 201 rural Alabama veterans were extracted from the larger study. Chi-square and t tests were used to analyze group differences in categorical and continuous variables. Logistic regression models were used to determine multivariate associations of variables with living will status and desire for help. Only 13% of participants had living wills. Of those without living wills, 40% expressed a desire for help completing a living will. African Americans were less likely to have living wills than were Caucasians. Participants with more than high school education were more likely to desire help completing living wills than were those with less education. With the exception of moderate-severe respiratory illness, moderate-severe illness was not associated with having a living will. With the exception of moderate-severe vascular illness, moderate-severe illness was not associated with desire for help completing a living will. The racial and educational disparities in living will status and desire for help and the number of participants who desired help completing a living will suggests a need for action to increase advance care planning among rural veterans. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
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