Health behavior change in advance care planning: an agent-based model
Authored by Natalie C Ernecoff, Christopher R Keane, Steven M Albert
Date Published: 2016
DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-2872-9
Sponsors:
No sponsors listed
Platforms:
NetLogo
Model Documentation:
ODD
Model Code URLs:
https://static-content.springer.com/esm/art%3A10.1186%2Fs12889-016-2872-9/MediaObjects/12889_2016_2872_MOESM1_ESM.docx
Abstract
Background: A practical and ethical challenge in advance care planning
research is controlling and intervening on human behavior. Additionally, observing dynamic changes in advance care planning (ACP) behavior proves
difficult, though tracking changes over time is important for
intervention development. Agent-based modeling (ABM) allows researchers
to integrate complex behavioral data about advance care planning
behaviors and thought processes into a controlled environment that is
more easily alterable and observable. Literature to date has not
addressed how best to motivate individuals, increase facilitators and
reduce barriers associated with ACP. We aimed to build an ABM that
applies the Transtheoretical Model of behavior change to ACP as a health
behavior and accurately reflects: 1) the rates at which individuals
complete the process, 2) how individuals respond to barriers, facilitators, and behavioral variables, and 3) the interactions between
these variables.
Methods: We developed a dynamic ABM of the ACP decision making process
based on the stages of change posited by the Transtheoretical Model. We
integrated barriers, facilitators, and other behavioral variables that
agents encounter as they move through the process.
Results: We successfully incorporated ACP barriers, facilitators, and
other behavioral variables into our ABM, forming a plausible
representation of ACP behavior and decision-making. The resulting
distributions across the stages of change replicated those found in the
literature, with approximately half of participants in the
action-maintenance stage in both the model and the literature.
Conclusions: Our ABM is a useful method for representing dynamic social
and experiential influences on the ACP decision making process. This
model suggests structural interventions, e.g. increasing access to ACP
materials in primary care clinics, in addition to improved methods of
data collection for behavioral studies, e.g. incorporating longitudinal
data to capture behavioral dynamics.
Tags
Dynamics
Decision-Making
systems
Framework
Life
End
Directives