The role of acculturation in the process of advance care planning among Chinese immigrants

A narrative systematic review

Review (2023)
Author(s)

Tingting Zhu (Erasmus MC)

Diah Martina (National General Hospital, Jakarta, Indonesia, Erasmus MC, Universitas Indonesia)

Agnes van der van der Heide (Erasmus MC)

Ida J. Korfage (Erasmus MC)

Judith AC Rietjens (TU Delft - Industrial Design Engineering, Erasmus MC, TU Delft - DesIgning Value in Ecosystems)

Research Group
DesIgning Value in Ecosystems
Copyright
© 2023 Tingting Zhu, Diah Martina, Agnes van der Heide, Ida J. Korfage, J.A.C. Rietjens
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1177/02692163231179255
More Info
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Publication Year
2023
Language
English
Copyright
© 2023 Tingting Zhu, Diah Martina, Agnes van der Heide, Ida J. Korfage, J.A.C. Rietjens
Research Group
DesIgning Value in Ecosystems
Issue number
8
Volume number
37
Pages (from-to)
1063-1078
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Abstract

Background: Acculturation is the process of two different cultures coming into contact. It is unclear how acculturation influences Chinese immigrants’ engagement in advance care planning due to the complexity and multifaceted nature of both acculturation and advance care planning. Aims: To synthesize evidence regarding the role of Chinese immigrants’ acculturation in their engagement in advance care planning. Design: Systematic mixed-method review, registered in PROSPERO (CRD42021231822). Data sources: EMBASE, MEDLINE, Web of Science, and Google Scholar were searched for publications until January 21, 2021. Results: Twenty-one out of 1112 identified articles were included in the analysis. Of those 21 articles, 17 had a qualitative design and 13 originated from the United States. Three of four quantitative studies reported that higher acculturation levels were associated with better knowledge or higher rate of engagement in advance care planning. Analysis of qualitative studies showed that Chinese immigrants’ engagement in advance care planning was associated with their: (1) self-perceived cultural identity (native or non-native); (2) interpretation of filial piety (traditional or modern); and (3) interpretation of autonomy (individual or familial). To facilitate their engagement, Chinese immigrants prefer an implicit approach, non-family-related initiators, contextualization advance care planning in Chinese culture and using Chinese language. Conclusion: Chinese immigrants’ willingness to engage in advance care planning varied with their acculturation level. To engage them in advance care planning, we recommend adapting the introduction of advance care planning to address people’s perceptions of their cultural identity, filial piety, and autonomy, as well as their preference for certain approach, initiator, context, and language.