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Prevalence and correlates of advance care directives among older Australians accessing health and residential aged care services: multicentre audit study
  1. Karen M Detering1,2,
  2. Kimberly Buck1,
  3. Rasa Ruseckaite3,
  4. Helana Kelly1,
  5. Marcus Sellars1,
  6. Craig Sinclair4,
  7. Josephine M Clayton5,
  8. Linda Nolte1
  1. 1 Advance Care Planning Australia, Austin Health, Heidelberg, Victoria, Australia
  2. 2 Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Science, University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
  3. 3 Department of Epidemiology and Preventative Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria, Australia
  4. 4 Rural Clinical School of Western Australia, University of Western Australia, Albany, Western Australia, Australia
  5. 5 Centre for Learning and Research in Palliative Care, Hammond Care, Greenwich Hospital and Sydney Medical School, University of Sydney, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
  1. Correspondence to Dr Karen M Detering; karen.detering{at}austin.org.au

Abstract

Objectives It is important that the outcomes of advance care planning (ACP) conversations are documented and available at the point of care. Advance care directives (ACDs) are a subset of ACP documentation and refer to structured documents that are completed and signed by competent adults. Other ACP documentation includes informal documentation by the person or on behalf of the person by someone else (eg, clinician, family). The primary objectives were to describe the prevalence and correlates of ACDs among Australians aged 65 and over accessing health and residential aged care services. The secondary aim was to describe the prevalence of other ACP documentation.

Design and setting A prospective multicentre health record audit in general practices (n=13), hospitals (n=12) and residential aged care facilities (RACFs; n=26).

Participants 503 people attending general practice, 574 people admitted to hospitals and 1208 people in RACFs.

Primary and secondary outcome measures Prevalence of one or more ACDs; prevalence of other ACP documentation.

Results 29.8% of people had at least one ACD on file. The majority were non-statutory documents (20.9%). ACD prevalence was significantly higher in RACFs (47.7%) than hospitals (15.7%) and general practices (3.2%) (p<0.001), and varied across jurisdictions. Multivariate logistic regression showed that the odds of having an ACD were positively associated with greater functional impairment and being in an RACF or hospital compared with general practice. 21.6% of people had other ACP documentation.

Conclusions In this study, 30% of people had ACDs accessible and a further 20% had other ACP documentation, suggesting that approximately half of participants had some form of ACP. Correlates of ACD completion were greater impairment and being in an RACF or hospital. Greater efforts to promote and standardise ACDs across jurisdictions may help to assist older people to navigate and complete ACDs and to receive care consistent with their preferences.

Trial registration number ACTRN12617000743369.

  • advance care planning
  • advance care directive
  • prevalence
  • quality in health care
  • clinical audit

This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the Creative Commons Attribution Non Commercial (CC BY-NC 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt, build upon this work non-commercially, and license their derivative works on different terms, provided the original work is properly cited, appropriate credit is given, any changes made indicated, and the use is non-commercial. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.

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Strengths and limitations of this study

  • This Australian national, multicentre, cross-sectional health record audit aimed to determine the prevalence of advance care directives among people aged 65 years and older accessing Australian hospitals, residential aged care facilities and general practices.

  • Data collectors were trained in the audit methodology using a standardised approach.

  • The results of this study will inform future steps towards improved advance care planning data collection methodology, implementation strategies and evaluation processes, within Australia and internationally, with the aim of improving advance care planning uptake.

  • The recruitment strategy, using an expression of interest process, is likely to have resulted in a selection bias towards organisations with an interest in advance care planning.

  • Not all Australian states and territories were similarly represented, limiting the generalisability of findings across Australia.

Introduction

Advance care planning (ACP) is a process of planning for future healthcare, whereby the person’s values and preferences are made known. ACP may also involve the appointment of a substitute decision-maker.1 The ultimate goal of ACP is to align the actual care the person receives with their preferences.2 While ACP conversations are valuable in their own right, completion of advance care directives (ACDs) is useful because they provide evidence and support for substitute decision-makers and clinicians who need to consider and advocate for the person’s expressed preferences if the person subsequently loses decision-making capacity.3–5

Internationally, there is considerable variation in the terminology, documentation and legislative frameworks related to ACDs.6–11 In Australia, an ACD is a type of document recognised by common law or statutory legislation that is completed and signed by a competent adult. It can record the person’s preferences for future care and appoint a substitute decision-maker to make decisions about future care.12

Although all Australian jurisdictions recognise ACDs under legislation (statutory) or common law (non-statutory), terminology differs across jurisdictions. While early statutory ACDs mostly focused on specific treatment instructions and/or appointment of a substitute decision-maker, increasingly, statutory ACDs also include values and goals elements.13 Non-statutory ACDs generally focus more broadly on a person’s values and goals for future care, but may also include specific instructions regarding treatment.14 Currently in Australia, all jurisdictions provide a statutory ACD for appointing a substitute decision-maker, and all except New South Wales and Tasmania offer statutory ACDs for recording preferences for care.6 Non-statutory ACDs are also used in Australia,13 but the legal standing of these documents has only been tested in New South Wales.6 14

ACP may also result in ‘other ACP documentation’.15 These are documents that relate to ACP but do not meet the definition of an ACD,12 and may include documents written on behalf of a person without capacity (by family, substitute decision-makers or clinicians) or informal, personally written letters.15 Additionally, there are documents written by health professionals that describe medical action to be taken in the event of an emergency. In Australia, these include goals of care forms and resuscitation orders and serve a similar purpose to that of the Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment.16

ACP is recognised as good medical practice,17–20 and is supported within policy and legislative frameworks internationally.10 11 ACP is widely recognised in Australian policy and legislative frameworks3 12 14 21 22 including the National Palliative Care Strategy 201021 and the 2017 Productivity Commission report, ‘Introducing Competition and Informed User Choice into Human Services’.23 However, little is known about the current prevalence of ACDs in Australia. The National Framework for Advance Care Directives 201114 and the evaluation of the National Palliative Care Strategy in 201624 identified the need for baseline data on ACDs. Previous attempts to estimate prevalence within Australia and internationally are scarce and have mostly relied on self-report, been limited to only one type of ACD or restricted to one region or healthcare setting.25–40 Without detailed national ACD prevalence data, it is difficult for governments and services to monitor the effectiveness of ACP policy and implementation initiatives.12 14 21

The primary aims of this study were to describe the prevalence of ACDs among older Australians accessing selected health and aged care services, to document the types of ACDs completed, to explore the characteristics of those with an ACD and to use learnings to inform the future study of ACD prevalence in Australia. The secondary aim was to determine the prevalence of other ACP documentation.

Methods

Data reported in this article originate from a large-scale national study examining the prevalence of ACDs in selected Australian general practices, hospitals and residential aged care facilities. The study involved a prospective multicentre audit of health records and a self-report survey of a subset of people whose records were included in the audit. The study protocol has been reported elsewhere.15 This article focuses on the audit component of the study. Data relevant to the survey and to clinical care plans will be reported elsewhere. A brief summary of the audit methodology is outlined here.

Informed consent was obtained for the survey component of the study. The Strengthening the Reporting of Observational Studies in Epidemiology guidelines were followed in the reporting of this cross-sectional study.41

Setting, sample, recruitment and data collection

Participating sites were Australian general practices, hospitals and residential aged care facilities. Health records were audited for people aged 65 years and older (50 years and older for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander peoples) who had been admitted to hospital or living in a residential aged care facility for more than 48 hours, and those visiting general practice on the study day(s). Sites from all eight Australian jurisdictions were invited to participate via expression of interest. Additional sites were approached aiming to promote representativeness across sectors and jurisdictions. Participating sites received $A100 per audited health record, to a maximum of $A5000 per site.

Health records of people in the hospital and residential aged care facilities settings were randomly selected from a list of eligible people, while in general practices consecutive eligible records were audited.15

Data collectors from each site were trained in the audit methodology using a pilot-tested and standardised approach. Data collectors were instructed to search paper and/or electronic health records for a maximum of 15 min for ACDs and other ACP documentation. Because ACP legislation is determined separately by each Australian state or territory, data collection occurred using a jurisdiction-specific instrument. Data were entered and stored on a secure cloud-based database specifically built for this project.

Health record audit

Demographic and clinical information

Data extracted included age, gender, country of birth, indigenous status, English language status, diagnostic category and Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) status (0=fully active to 4=completely disabled).42

Presence of ACDs and other ACP documentation

For the purposes of this study, ACDs were defined as formal documents recognised by statutory legislation (statutory ACD) or common law (non-statutory ACD) completed and signed by a competent adult (online supplementary appendix 1). Any ACP documentation that did not meet the definition of an ACD was classified as ‘other ACP documentation’. Data extracted during the audit included the type and name of ACDs or other ACP documentation identified in the health record. Data collectors were trained to categorise located documents as statutory ACD: preferences for care, statutory ACD: substitute decision-maker, non-statutory ACDs or other ACP documentation. By collecting the name of any documentation identified in the health record, it was also possible to ensure documents were categorised correctly, and to explore the characteristics of documents being used. Analysis of text descriptions of the names of documents identified indicated that 38 documents were misclassified by data collectors during data collection. These 38 documents were recoded prior to analysis. Specifically, 14 documents that were incorrectly classified as statutory ACD: preferences for care were reclassified as either statutory ACD: substitute decision-maker (n=6), non-statutory ACDs (n=3) or other ACP documentation (n=5). In addition, 24 documents that were incorrectly classified as other ACP documentation were reclassified as statutory ACD: preferences for care (n=13) or non-statutory ACDs (n=11).

Supplemental material

Outcome measures

The primary outcome was the prevalence of at least one ACD (statutory ACD: preferences for care, statutory ACD: substitute decision-maker and/or non-statutory ACD) in the health record. The secondary outcome was a prevalence of other ACP documentation.

Statistical analysis

Statistical analyses were conducted using SPSS V.24.0 (IBM). ACD prevalence overall, and for the three types of ACDs (statutory ACD: preferences for care, statutory ACD: substitute decision-maker and non-statutory ACD), was calculated for the total sample and separately for settings and jurisdictions. The secondary outcome of the prevalence of other ACP documentation was calculated for the full sample.

Correlates of having an ACD on file were first explored through univariate analyses. Factors tested were: age, gender, jurisdiction, setting, country of birth, indigenous status, English language status, a range of medical conditions, morbidity and ECOG status. Variables with univariate associations of p<0.15 were entered simultaneously into a multivariate logistic regression model to identify factors that characterised people with ACDs from those without. For this step, the level of statistical significance was lowered to 0.05. The multivariate analysis is presented here. ORs for having at least one ACD on file are reported, together with 95% CIs. In a supplementary logistic regression analysis, data were weighted for age, gender and jurisdiction to compensate for under-representation from the younger (65–75 years) cohort and over-representation from females and people living in Victoria. Weighting was conducted using the latest Australian Bureau of Statistics data.43 To account for variables with low cell counts in the weighted analysis, 10 people who were of indigenous background and aged less than 65 years were excluded from the analysis and the three smallest jurisdictions (Australian Capital Territory, South Australia and Tasmania) were combined.

Patient and public involvement

People whose health records were included in the audit were not involved in the design nor in the recruitment or any other aspect of conducting the study. Results of the study cannot be directly shared with participants as only de-identified data were collected, however, academic outputs will be publicised through community networks, social media and traditional media channels. All sites and jurisdictions involved in the study have been provided with de-identified individualised reports of study findings, including how their site/jurisdiction compares to others. The specific intent of providing these reports is to inform service-level initiatives and future ACP programmes and policy.

Results

Data were collected from 51 sites between September 2017 and January 2018. All jurisdictions except the Northern Territory and Western Australia were represented (table 1).

Table 1

Characteristics of study sites (n=51)

From a total of 2298 audited records, 13 records were excluded because ages were outside specified criteria, leaving 2285 participants. Sample characteristics are presented in table 2.

Table 2

Sample characteristics* (n=2285)

Prevalence of ACDs

Prevalence rates are summarised in table 3. The overall prevalence of having at least one ACD was 29.8%. Non-statutory ACDs were the most common ACDs identified (20.9%), followed by statutory ACD: substitute decision-maker (10.9%) and statutory ACD: preferences for care (2.7%). There were 24 differently named non-statutory ACDs (online supplementary appendix 2). Almost all (94.6%) ACDs were identified within 5 min and most (80%) were found within paper-based records.

Table 3

Prevalence of ACDs (n=2285)

People in residential aged care facilities were significantly more likely to have an ACD (47.7%) than people in hospitals (15.7%) or general practice (3.2%), χ2 (2)=409.36, φ=0.42 (95% CI 0.39 to 0.46), p<0.001. Overall, prevalence rates were highest in South Australia (53.1%).

Correlates of ACDs

Based on univariate analyses, age, gender, jurisdiction, setting, musculoskeletal conditions, dementia, mental illness, urinary/excretory and reproductive conditions, cancer, morbidity, and ECOG status were associated with the presence of an ACD and were included in multivariate analyses. The variable ‘jurisdiction’ was subsequently excluded because a low count in one cell (n=31) introduced instability to the model. To account for missing data on the ECOG variable (n=674), we attempted multiple imputation. However, this approach was ineffective because although it boosted sample size, it also greatly increased the variance and reduced the efficiency of the model. Thus, for the purposes of the regression model, the 674 participants with missing data on the ECOG variable (29.6% of the total sample) were removed using listwise deletion.

Results of the multivariate logistic regression analysis are presented in figure 1. There were higher odds of having an ACD for those who were in a residential aged care facility or hospital compared with general practice (OR 27.04; 95% CI 6.44 to 113.60 and OR 7.94; 95% CI 1.89 to 33.44, respectively), and for those rated as ECOG grades 2, 3 or 4 (moderate to very severe disability) compared with those rated as ECOG grade 0 (fully active; OR 4.26; 95% CI 1.61 to 11.29, OR 2.91; 95% CI 1.11 to 7.60 and OR 3.53; 95% CI 1.32 to 9.40, respectively).

Figure 1

ORs for factors associated with having at least one advance care directive (n=1606). R2=0.17 (Nagelkerke). Model χ2 (15)=206.47, p<0.0001. Bars represent 95% CIs. Factors for which the 95% CI does not include the value of 1 (indicated by the grey line) are statistically significant. An OR of 1 indicates no association between a predictor variable and the odds of having an ACD. †P<0.05 compared with reference category. ECOG, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group; GP, general practice; RACF, residential aged care facility.

After the data were weighted for age, gender and jurisdiction, the overall prevalence of ACDs was reduced to 21.4%. Using the weighted data, the results of the multivariate logistic regression model showed that healthcare setting no longer significantly predicted the presence of an ACD in the health record. However, several other variables became significant in the weighted model: there were higher odds of having an ACD for those who were older (OR 1.03; 95% CI 1.01 to 1.05), those with a urinary or reproductive condition (OR 1.63; 95% CI 1.17 to 2.25), those with cancer (OR 1.93; 95% CI 1.29 to 2.87) and those rated as ECOG grade 1 (low disability) compared with those rated as ECOG grade 0 (OR 6.15; 95% CI 1.37 to 27.54). Consistent with the unweighted model, there were also higher odds of having an ACD for those who were rated as ECOG grades 2, 3 or 4 compared with those rated as ECOG grade 0 (OR 16.88; 95% CI 4.19 to 67.94, OR 19.35; 95% CI 4.80 to 77.97 and OR 20.60; 95% CI 5.01 to 84.67, respectively). Full results of the weighted model are presented in online supplementary appendix 3.

Prevalence of other ACP documentation

The prevalence of other ACP documentation was 21.6% (n=493). Of the 493 people with other ACP documentation, 457 (93%) only had other ACP documentation (ie, did not also have an ACD). Therefore, 20% of the total sample of 2285 records contained only other ACP documentation. Only 20% of other ACP documentation was written by the person themselves. There were 37 differently named types of other ACP documentation (online supplementary appendix 4).

Discussion

This study found that approximately one-third of older Australians in selected general practices, hospitals and residential aged care facilities had at least one ACD in their health record. Most of these (21%) were non-statutory documents, despite the availability of legislated documents in most Australian states and territories. Less than 3% of the sample completed a statutory ACD: preferences for care, and only 11% completed a statutory ACD: substitute decision-maker. The odds of having an ACD were higher in residential aged care facilities than hospitals and general practices, with considerable variation between jurisdictions. The odds of having an ACD were also higher for those with functional impairment. In addition, 20% of people had ACP documentation other than ACDs in their files, showing that approximately 50% of participants had some form of ACP. However, there was an extensive range of documents used (24 different non-statutory ACDs and 37 different other ACP documentation).

This study found that, despite ACDs being governed by specific legislation across most Australian jurisdictions, non-statutory ACDs were much more likely to be identified. Traditionally, statutory ACDs have predominantly focused on limitations of treatment, whereas non-statutory documents have focused on the person’s values, goals and reasoning behind decisions. Thus, non-statutory ACDs have been perceived as being more flexible and applicable to various future medical situations.6 14 However, lack of clarity regarding the legal status of non-statutory ACDs may reduce clinician confidence and therefore the likelihood that preferences are actually followed in practice.6 44 Statutory ACDs also have procedural safeguards to protect against freedom from duress, fraud or undue influence.6 13 45 However, witnessing and other procedural requirements also present barriers to completion.6 Recently, values-based elements have been included within statutory ACDs in some jurisdictions in Australia (online supplementary appendix 1table 2). There is also increased access to education for people and practitioners to facilitate completion of statutory ACDs.13 These approaches aim to support improved flexibility and promote opportunities for valid completion of statutory ACDs while also providing legal clarity and protections for persons, substitute decision-makers and clinicians. Furthermore, there have been calls in Australia to standardise and simplify ACDs, and to harmonise legislation.6 14 23 A large number of different types of documents identified in this study (online supplementary appendices 2 and 4) support these efforts.

People in residential aged care facilities were significantly more likely to have an ACD than people in hospitals or attending general practice. As providers of care to one-third of people approaching the end of life, residential aged care facilities play a vital role in facilitating ACP and enacting ACDs where they exist.23 46 The lower prevalence in hospitals and very low prevalence in general practices suggests that further efforts are needed to increase uptake of ACP in these settings, and to understand barriers to this occurring.

It is estimated that approximately 30% of people admitted to hospitals are likely to be in their last year of life,47 highlighting the important role hospitals have in supporting people to participate in ACP and to develop, review, update or enact ACDs.3 48 However, research suggests that inadequate systems, support structures and ACP training for clinicians in hospitals can lead to a reluctance to have conversations and develop ACDs.23 49 50 Addressing these barriers would be beneficial to increasing uptake in the hospital sector.

In addition, while general practitioners are well placed to hold ACP conversations given their often long-standing and trusted relationships with patients,48 51 ACP conversations require time and effort, and in most circumstances, cannot be completed on a single visit. The pressure of managing conflicting patient and clinician priorities within short appointments and the absence of suitable remuneration can discourage primary care providers from dedicating time to ACP.48 Increasing ACP in primary care could be supported through the inclusion of ACP into routine health assessments, encouraging a multidisciplinary approach and using funding for regular consultations to facilitate remuneration for the time required.23 48 52 For the true potential of ACP to be achieved across all health sectors, a system-wide and multifaceted approach to ACP implementation is necessary. Key elements include increasing community awareness and uptake earlier in illness trajectories, provision of training and support for clinicians and aged care workers, and improving storage and accessibility of ACDs at the point of care.13 14 23 24 48 52

Prior to weighting for age, gender and jurisdiction, the odds of having an ACD were higher for people with functional impairment. It is likely that people with greater dependency engage more regularly with healthcare services and that functional impairment acts as an ACP trigger. Progressive disability may also increase the relevance of ACP for individuals.53 However, people with other conditions, including dementia and cancer, were no more likely to have ACDs than people without these conditions. Future ACP implementation and policy should continue to promote ACP among people with all serious, progressive and chronic conditions.3 48

After weighting for age, gender and jurisdiction, the overall prevalence of ACDs was reduced from 30% to 21%. The weighted model also showed greater odds of having an ACD for people who were older, people with a urinary or reproductive condition and people with cancer. The study sample was under-represented in the younger cohort (65–75 years) and over-represented in females and the jurisdiction of Victoria in comparison to the general Australian population, making it difficult to draw firm conclusions about the weighted analysis.43 Nonetheless, given the weighted regression model increased the effect of the younger cohort of the sample (those aged 65–75 years) on the results, it is likely that these younger age groups were more likely to have an ACD if they had a urinary/reproductive condition or cancer. Further research among this age cohort would help to clarify these findings.

Consistent with previous work,40 ACD prevalence rates varied between jurisdictions. However, results should be interpreted with caution given not all jurisdictions were similarly represented. Future prevalence studies should aim to recruit more representative samples. Nevertheless, variation in legislative frameworks and policy across Australia is likely to contribute to observed differences.40

The overall ACD prevalence found here was higher than previous Australian estimates, which range from 0.2% in residential aged care facilities,37 to 13% among older persons in emergency departments,39 to 14% among community participants,40 to 11%–22% for recognised legal ACDs among adults in South Australia.25 Past studies have typically focused on prevalence estimates for one type of ACD. The higher prevalence reported here may reflect the inclusion of statutory and non-statutory ACD and may also relate to the age of the population studied. A recent South Australian study found that ACDs were most common among those aged 65 years and over.

From an international perspective, the results found in this study are comparable to a recent systematic review of 150 studies in the USA, which reported an average ACD prevalence of 36.7%.34 However, other international ACD prevalence estimates vary. In aged care settings, prevalence rates range from 11%–36% in Germany,26 27 to 16% in Taiwan,28 to 59% in the USA.29 In general practice, a prevalence of 33% was found in one European study30 while a Canadian study reported an ACD prevalence of 20%.31 In the hospital sector, ACD prevalence rates of 12%–26% have been reported in studies in the USA.32 33 Apart from any actual differences between jurisdictions internationally, these varying prevalence estimates are likely to reflect a wide range of methodologies and study populations and variation in the quality of studies.

In this study, a prospective multisite audit methodology was used in an attempt to overcome the potential bias inherent in other methodologies, such as self-report and retrospective design. This study also used a standardised approach to audit methodology and ACD classification, with the aim of facilitating meaningful comparison between sites. However, recruitment was via expression of interest and this may have resulted in selection bias towards sites with an interest in ACP. This, together with the lack of representation across jurisdictions and health sectors, limits the extent to which the findings are generalisable across Australia. Given the audit methodology used, it is not possible to determine quality and extent of ACP conversations known to be an important determinant of a successful ACP programme.4 5 An additional limitation of the audit methodology is that it is unknown whether the presence of any ACDs or a specific type of ACDs translates into care that is consistent with the person’s preferences, the ultimate goal of ACP.1 Nonetheless, using a standardised audit methodology allows for scalable national measurement of documentation of completed ACDs, which is one key component of ACP. Finally, missing data on the ECOG status variable (affecting approximately 20% of the sample) may limit the findings related to predictors of ACD completion.

The findings of this study provide a number of avenues for further implementation activities and research, not only within the Australian context, but also internationally. This could include understanding how individuals conceptualise and make decisions regarding ACP, how clinicians use ACDs, whether there are particular types of ACDs that are more useful, and the utility of other ACP documentation in improving care consistent with a person’s preferences. Furthermore, improved understanding regarding the facilitators and barriers to ACP uptake in general practice, hospitals and residential aged care facilities, and the potential consequences of not having an ACD available to guide medical decision-making at the point of care is necessary if the maximal value of ACP and ACDs is to be achieved.

Conclusion

This study provides one of the most detailed and comprehensive estimates to date on ACD prevalence in Australian general practices, hospitals and residential aged care facilities, as well as one of the largest multisite data sets regarding ACD prevalence among older people internationally. Overall, approximately 30% of older Australians had at least one ACD documented in their health record, and the majority of these were non-statutory documents. The correlates of ACD completion were greater functional impairment and being in an aged care facility or hospital compared with attending general practice. Further work is required to increase the uptake of ACP and documentation of preferences in ACDs. This might include greater promotion of ACP, particularly among high-risk populations, public and health professional education campaigns supporting the use of statutory ACDs, and efforts to standardise documentation within and between Australian jurisdictions. Using standardised measurement of ACD prevalence will facilitate evaluation of implementation efforts and support meaningful comparisons within Australia and internationally.

Acknowledgments

We acknowledge the support and contribution of the National Prevalence Study Advisory Group, Sue Evans’ contribution to the study protocol, the study coordinator lead and the data collectors at each participating site, Sandy Errey for providing statistical guidance and Ben White for providing technical feedback on this manuscript.

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Footnotes

  • Patient consent for publication Not required.

  • KMD and KB contributed equally.

  • Contributors KMD and KB contributed equally to this paper. KMD was involved in the conception, design, data acquisition, analysis and interpretation, and drafting the manuscript. KB was involved in data analysis and interpretation and drafting of the manuscript. RR and HK were involved in the design, data acquisition and review of the manuscript. MS was involved in data analysis and interpretation and review of the manuscript. CS and JMC were involved in the design, interpretation of data and review of the manuscript. LN was involved in the conception, design, data acquisition, analysis and interpretation, and review of manuscript. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

  • Funding This work was supported by the Australian Government Department of Health.

  • Competing interests None declared.

  • Ethics approval The study was approved by Austin Health Human Research Ethics Committee (ref: HREC/17/Austin/83) and site-specific approval was sought when required.

  • Provenance and peer review Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

  • Data sharing statement The datasets used and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.