scholarly journals HEALTH PROFESSIONALS’ PERSPECTIVES ABOUT ADVANCE CARE PLANNING IN PARKINSON'S DISEASE: A QUALITATIVE STUDY

2014 ◽  
Vol 4 (Suppl 1) ◽  
pp. A45.1-A45
Author(s):  
Timothy Jackson ◽  
Alexander Gerhard ◽  
Catherine Walshe
Author(s):  
Deepta Churm ◽  
Claire Dickinson ◽  
Louise Robinson ◽  
Paul Paes ◽  
Thomas Cronin ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Karen Carr ◽  
Felicity Hasson ◽  
Sonja McIlfatrick ◽  
Julia Downing

AbstractAdvance care planning enables parents to discuss their goal and wishes for the future treatment and care of their life-limited or life-threatened child. Whilst research has identified the barriers clinicians face to initiate such discussions, the views of the parents have received scant attention. This qualitative study, using reflexive thematic analysis, aimed to explore parents’ experience of the initiation of their child’s advance care planning discussions, to help provide an understanding to inform future practice. Single interviews were undertaken with 17 non-bereaved and bereaved parents. Parents reported they had engaged with future thinking but needed time before initiating this with clinicians. They identified the need for a trusted professional and time for private, thorough, non-judgemental discussion without feeling clinicians were ‘giving up’. Parents reported that advance care planning discussions were not always aligned to the dynamics of family life. They felt that health professionals were responsible for initiating advance planning conversations according to the families’ individual requirements. There was an apparent lack of standardised protocols to assist paediatric advance care planning discussion initiation.Conclusion: Initiating advance care planning is a complicated process that needs to be tailored to the specific parent and child situation. Health professionals need to appreciate that parents are key contributors to initiate engagement with advance care planning discussions but that they also require support and care, recognising this may facilitate the building of trust, identified as a key corner stone, of paediatric advance care planning initiation and engagement. What is Known:• In paediatric palliative care, parents are challenged with wanting to sustain hope whilst thinking and planning for their child’s end of life. Paediatric advance care planning discussions are often delayed or avoided and triggered by physical deterioration. What is New:• Previous relationship with HCP not essential but parental trust of the HCP is fundamental to Paediatric advance care planning initiation engagement. To build mutual trust health professionals’ approach needs to be professional, respectful and empathetic to the parent and child’s situation.• Subtle paediatric advance care planning parent initiation preparation by HCP is often unnoticed by parents but may be the crux of empowering parents to initiate advance care planning conversations themselves as they need to feel a sense of regaining control before planning ahead.


2021 ◽  
pp. 089198872098891
Author(s):  
Deepta Churm ◽  
Claire Dickinson ◽  
Louise Robinson ◽  
Paul Paes ◽  
Thomas Cronin ◽  
...  

Background: Advance Care Planning (ACP) allows people the opportunity to plan for a time when they may lose capacity. The aim of this study was to determine the extent people with Parkinson’s disease (PD) were aware of ACP, existing plans they held and to explore their own views, as well as their relatives, on planning for the future. Methods: This was a sequential explanatory mixed methods study with a postal quantitative survey to establish awareness and engagement with planning for the future; and qualitative semi-structured interviews to explore the views of people with PD and their relatives on ACP and future plans. Results: 104 questionnaires were analyzed. 76% of respondents had not heard of ACP, while 69% expressed an interest in finding out more about ACP. 78% had a will, and 23% had appointed lasting power of attorneys. All interviewees acknowledged engaging in some aspect of planning. Plans were mostly practical as opposed to health-care related. Interviewees expressed a preference for ACP to be carried out by their PD team, at home, and at a time relevant to their condition. Conclusion: The awareness and understanding of ACP in people with PD is low. While there is desire to be better informed about ACP, this did not translate into desire to engage in ACP. Health professionals should identify people for whom ACP may serve a positive purpose, and proactively address ACP as a continuum with them, while ensuring awareness is raised about ACP, and there is access for who are interested.


2021 ◽  
Vol 50 (Supplement_1) ◽  
pp. i12-i42
Author(s):  
C Khuang Lim ◽  
C Miller ◽  
T Jones

Abstract Introduction NICE guideline recommends that all patients with Parkinson’s disease should be reviewed every 6–12 months and offered opportunities to discuss Advanced Care Planning (ACP) (1, 2). There is evidence demonstrating that Advanced Care Plans results in shorter length of stay in the last year of life and lower hospital costs (2, 3). A local baseline audit showed that Advanced Care Planning was not performed adequately. Methods A local baseline audit on community care home patients with Parkinsonism was completed in February 2018. A community-based Parkinson’s clinic was commenced in June 2018. Patients with parkinsonism who were unable to attend hospital clinics due to underlying frailty, neuropsychiatry and physical issues, were reviewed. At each visit, advice was provided on medicines management and there were discussions around Advance Care Planning. A re-audit was completed in August 2019. Patient’s Electronic Patient Records were scrutinised to evaluate progress and identify those who had died. Data was analysed using Microsoft Excel. Results The initiative contributed directly to end of life care in 7/17 patients. Parkinson’s disease medications were rationalised in 11/17 (64.70%). 14/17 (82.35%) had a community-based Do Not Resuscitate order completed. Conclusions The community Parkinson’s clinic service promoted Advance Care Planning in patients with Parkinsonism. This service provides specialist input in frail older people with Parkinsonism who were unable to attend hospital clinic, promoting end of life choices around where they wished to die and avoiding unnecessary hospitalisation in the final stages of their life.


2019 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Leonard L. Sokol ◽  
Michael J. Young ◽  
Jack Paparian ◽  
Benzi M. Kluger ◽  
Hillary D. Lum ◽  
...  

AbstractRecent discoveries support the principle that palliative care may improve the quality of life of patients with Parkinson’s disease and those who care for them. Advance care planning, a component of palliative care, provides a vehicle through which patients, families, and clinicians can collaborate to identify values, goals, and preferences early, as well as throughout the disease trajectory, to facilitate care concordant with patient wishes. While research on this topic is abundant in other life-limiting disorders, particularly in oncology, there is a paucity of data in Parkinson’s disease and related neurological disorders. We review and critically evaluate current practices on advance care planning through the analyses of three bioethical challenges pertinent to Parkinson’s disease and propose recommendations for each.


2015 ◽  
Vol 3 (31) ◽  
pp. 1-138 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristian Pollock ◽  
Eleanor Wilson

BackgroundAdvance care planning (ACP) enables patients to consider, discuss and, if they wish, document their wishes and preferences for future care, including decisions to refuse treatment, in the event that they lose capacity to make decisions for themselves. ACP is a key component of UK health policy to improve the experience of death and dying for patients and their families. There is limited evidence about how patients and health professionals understand ACP, or when and how this is initiated. It is evident that many people find discussion of and planning for end of life care difficult, and tend to avoid the topic.AimTo investigate how patients, their relatives and health professionals initiate and experience discussion of ACP and the outcomes of advance discussions in shaping care at the end of life.Design and data collectionQualitative study with two workstreams: (1) interviews with 37 health professionals (general practitioners, specialist nurses and community nurses) about their experiences of ACP; and (2) longitudinal case studies of 21 patients with 6-month follow-up. Cases included a patient and, where possible, a nominated key relative and/or health professional as well as a review of medical records. Complete case triads were obtained for 11 patients. Four cases comprised the patient alone, where respondents were unable or unwilling to nominate either a family member or a professional carer they wished to include in the study. Patients were identified as likely to be within the last 6 months of life. Ninety-seven interviews were completed in total.SettingGeneral practices and community care settings in the East Midlands of England.FindingsThe study found ACP to be uncommon and focused primarily on specific documented tasks involving decisions about preferred place of death and cardiopulmonary resuscitation, supporting earlier research. There was no evidence of ACP in nearly half (9 of 21) of patient cases. Professionals reported ACP discussions to be challenging. It was difficult to recognise when patients had entered the last year of life, or to identify their readiness to consider future planning. Patients often did not wish to do so before they had become gravely ill. Consequently, ACP discussions tended to be reactive, rather than pre-emptive, occurring in response to critical events or evidence of marked deterioration. ACP discussions intersected two parallel strands of planning: professional organisation and co-ordination of care; and the practical and emotional preparatory work that patients and families undertook to prepare themselves for death. Reference to ACP as a means of guiding decisions for patients who had lost capacity was rare.ConclusionsAdvance care planning remains uncommon, is often limited to documentation of a few key decisions, is reported to be challenging by many health professionals, is not welcomed by a substantial number of patients and tends to be postponed until death is clearly imminent. Current implementation largely ignores the purpose of ACP as a means of extending personal autonomy in the event of lost capacity.Future workAttention should be paid to public attitudes to death and dying (including those of culturally diverse and ethnic minority groups), place of death, resuscitation and the value of anticipatory planning. In addition the experiences and needs of two under-researched groups should be explored: the frail elderly, including those who manage complex comorbid conditions, unrecognised as vulnerable cases; and those patients affected by stigmatised conditions, such as substance abuse or serious mental illness who fail to engage constructively with services and are not recognised as suitable referrals for palliative and end of life care.FundingThe National Institute for Health Research Health Services and Delivery Research programme.


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