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BACKGROUND: People with intellectual disabilities are rarely involved in end-of-life decisions. This study investigated and further developed approaches and resources to enable inclusive end-of-life care planning. METHODS: A multi-centre, multi-method four-phase study, involving 195 researchers, participants, advisors and co-design members, including 36 people with intellectual disabilities: (i) evidence review; (ii) stakeholder focus groups; (iii) Experience-Based Co-Design and (iv) testing of co-designed resources. RESULTS: There was little empirical evidence regarding the efficacy of existing resources. Focus group participants signalled overwhelming support for inclusive end-of-life care planning but notable variance around where/what/when/who/how. The co-design group developed a toolkit of existing and new resources. Feedback from toolkit testers was positive but barriers to staff engagement through the testing period were noted. CONCLUSIONS: Flexible, creative and interactive approaches that open up conversations are the building blocks for inclusive end-of-life care planning. Barriers include lack of staff confidence, time and resources and a death avoidance culture.

Original publication

DOI

10.1111/jar.70019

Type

Journal article

Journal

J Appl Res Intellect Disabil

Publication Date

01/2025

Volume

38

Keywords

advance care planning, end‐of‐life decisions, intellectual disability, palliative care, shared decision making, Humans, Intellectual Disability, Terminal Care, Adult, Advance Care Planning, Male, Middle Aged, Female, Focus Groups