scholarly journals Characterizing Life-Sustaining Treatment Decisions of Seriously Ill Veterans During Pilot Testing of the Veterans Health Administration’s Life-Sustaining Treatment Decisions Initiative (QI742)

2019 ◽  
Vol 57 (2) ◽  
pp. 478-479 ◽  
Author(s):  
Anne Walling ◽  
Karleen Giannitrapani ◽  
Mary Beth Foglia ◽  
Jill Lowery ◽  
Lisa Lehmann ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 4 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. 751-752
Author(s):  
Joan Carpenter ◽  
Robert Burke

Abstract Discussing and documenting goals of care and life-sustaining treatment decisions with seriously ill patients is a widely endorsed practice by healthcare and professional organizations. In 2018, The Veterans Health Administration (VA) initiated a new national policy to standardize such practices, the Life Sustaining Treatment Decisions Initiative (LSTDI), which included a coordinated set of evidence-based strategies and practice standards for conducting, documenting, and supporting high-quality goals of care conversations (GoCCs); staff training to enhance skills in conducting, documenting, and supporting GoCCs; standardized, durable electronic health record tools for documenting patients’ goals and preferences; and monitoring and information technology tools to support implementation and improvement. In this symposium, we will describe the first 20 months of implementing the LSTDI across the VA, the largest integrated healthcare system in the US. The first paper will focus on the factors associated with documentation of a GoCC and treatment preferences. The second paper will present findings describing facilitators and barriers to implementing the LSTDI and identifying factors that promote high rates of LSTDI documentation. The third paper examines patient level outcomes associated with a documented goal of comfort care, specifically the odds of receipt of hospice/palliative care, hospitalization, or ICU admission. This symposium will provide attendees with important information regarding a wide range of individual and system strategies to enhance the care of seriously ill older adults by engaging patients with serious illness in GoCCs and documenting their preferences for treatment in durable, easily accessible notes and orders.


2020 ◽  
Vol 38 (1) ◽  
pp. 68-76
Author(s):  
Karleen F. Giannitrapani ◽  
Anne M. Walling ◽  
Ariadna Garcia ◽  
MaryBeth Foglia ◽  
Jill S. Lowery ◽  
...  

Background: Prior to national spread, the Department of Veterans Affairs implemented a pilot of the life-sustaining treatment decisions initiative (LSTDI) to promote proactive goals of care conversations (GoCC) with seriously ill patients, including policy and practice standards, an electronic documentation template and order set, and implementation support. Aim: To describe a 2-year pilot of the LSTDI at 4 demonstration sites. Design: Prospective observational study. Setting/Participants: A total of 6664 patients who had at least one GoCC. Results: Descriptive statistics characterized patient demographics, goals of care, LST decisions, and risk of hospitalization or mortality among patients with at least one GoCC. Participants were on average 71.4 years old, 93.2% male, 87.1% white, and 64.7% urban; 27.3% died by the end of the pilot period. Fifteen percent lacked decision-making capacity (DMC). Nonmutually exclusive goals included to be cured (7.6%), to prolong life (34%), to improve/maintain quality of life (61.5%), to be comfortable (53%), to obtain support for family/caregiver (8.4%), to achieve life goals (2.1%), and other (10.5%). Many GoCCs resulted in a do not resuscitate (DNR) order (58.8%). Patients without DMC were more likely to have comfort-oriented goals (77.3% vs 48.8%) and a DNR (84% vs 52.6%). Chart abstraction supported content validity of GoCC documentation. Conclusion: The pilot demonstrated that standardizing practices for eliciting and documenting GoCCs resulted in customized documentation of goals of care and LST decisions of a large number of seriously ill patients and established the feasibility of spreading standardized practices throughout a large integrated health care system.


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (1) ◽  
pp. e20-e20 ◽  
Author(s):  
Amane Abdul-Razzak ◽  
Daren K Heyland ◽  
Jessica Simon ◽  
Sunita Ghosh ◽  
Andrew G Day ◽  
...  

ObjectivesTo quantify agreement between patients and their family members on their own values and preferences for use or non-use of life-sustaining treatments for the patient.MethodsHospitalised patients aged 55 years or older with advanced pulmonary, cardiac, liver disease or metastatic cancer or aged 80 years or older from medical wards at 16 Canadian hospitals and their family members completed a questionnaire including eight items about values related to life-sustaining treatment and a question about preferences for life-sustaining treatments.ResultsWe recruited a total of 313 patient-family member dyads. Crude agreement between patients and family members about values related to life-sustaining treatment was 42% across all eight items but varied widely: 20% when asking how important it was for the patient to respect the wishes of family members regarding their care; 72% when asking how important it was for the patient to be kept comfortable and suffer as little as possible. Crude agreement on preferences for life-sustaining treatment was 91% (kappa 0.60; 95%CI 0.45 to 0.75) when looking at preferences for cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR) versus no CPR but fell to 56% when including all five response options with varying degrees of resuscitative, medical or comfort options (kappa 0.39; 95%CI 0.31 to 0.47).ConclusionsThere is appreciable disagreement between seriously ill hospitalised patients and family members in their values and preferences for life-sustaining treatment. Strategies are needed to improve the quality of advance care planning, so that surrogates are better able to honour patient’s wishes at the end of life.


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