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ST1&2 PALLIATIVE CARE & ETHICS Niall Cameron Rosalie Dunn Elayne Harris Euan Paterson
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Palliative Care and Ethics 09:00 Diagnosing dying / Anticipatory Care Planning 10:30End of Life Ethics 11:45Coffee / Tea 12:00Symptom Relief in Palliative Care 12:45 Dining with death! 13:30 Do Not Attempt Cardio-Pulmonary Resuscitation – key issues & approach 14:45Coffee / Tea 15:00The ‘Good Death’ 16:30Feedback / Close
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Some all too common problems… The ‘sudden’ deterioration What does the patient know / think / want? What do the family know / think / want? Lack of medication Blue light ‘999’ at end of life Who knows what? The weekend catastrophe The ‘bad’ death… …and then 4 hours to confirm it happened!
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Anticipatory Care Planning (ACP) What is it? Why is it (possibly) more important in palliative care? Which patients is it for?
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‘Marla doesn’t have testicular cancer. Marla doesn’t have Tb. She isn’t dying. Okay in that brainy brain-food philosophy way, we’re all dying, but Marla isn’t dying the way Chloe is dying’ Chuck Palahniuk - Fight Club
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Death High Low Many years Function Death High Low Months or years Function Organ failure 6 Acute 2 Dementia, frailty and decline 7 Death High Low Weeks to years Function 5 Cancer GP has 20 deaths per list of 2000 patients per year Numbers and Trajectories
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Diagnosing dying What primary disease do they suffer from? How are they at this moment? How rapidly are they changing? Would you be surprised…?
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Which patients is it for? Patients with supportive / palliative care needs – Whoever YOU feel should be included! – Palliative care register – GSF register – SPICT / GSFS prognostication guidance? – Chronic disease registers? – Care Home patients?? – Housebound patients???
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Anticipatory Care Planning (ACP) What is it? Why is it (possibly) more important in palliative care? Which patients is it for? What does it entail?
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Legal Personal Medical Potential Problems Liverpool Care Pathway ePCS / KIS Welfare Power of Attorney Advance StatementThinking ahead & making plans Anticipatory Care Planning Just in Case DNA CPR SPAR DN Verification of Death GSFS Advance Care Planning Continuing Power of Attorney 1 Statement of values 2 Preferences & priorities 3 Advance decision to refuse treatment 4 Who else to consult Guardianship Anticipatory Care Planning SPAR Lanarkshire Home Care Pack
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Legal Capacity – Welfare Power of Attorney – Continuing Power of Attorney – Guardianship Consent (ePCS / KIS) – To record – To transfer Advance decision to refuse treatment
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Clinical Consideration of potential problems -What is likely to happen to THIS patient -What might happen to THIS patient DNACPR Just in Case -Proactive prescribing DN Verification of Expected Death Liverpool Care Pathway for the Dying Bereavement
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Patient / Personal Preferred priorities of care – Place of care – Place of death – Admission? – Aggressiveness of treatment What is wanted What is not wanted – Who is to be involved
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The views and wishes of patient / carer ‘My thinking ahead and making plans’ -What’s important to me just now -Planning ahead -Looking after me well -My concerns -Other important things -Things I want to know more about e.g. CPR -Keeping track Developed from work by Professor Scott Murray & Dr Kirsty Boyd, University of Edinburgh
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Advance statement Statement of values -E.g. what makes life worth living What patient wishes -E.g. place of care, aggressiveness of treatment What patient does not want -E.g. PEG feeding, SC fluids, CPR Who they would wish consulted
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Anticipatory Care Planning (ACP) What is it? Why is it (possibly) more important in palliative care? Which patients is it for? What does it entail? What is the process? – When should this be done? – Who should do it? – How should it be done? – How should it be shared?
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ACP Process When should this be done? – At any time in life that seems appropriate – Continuously Who should do it? – By anyone with an appropriate relationship! How should it be done? – My Thinking Ahead & Making Plans – Carefully – Write it down How can it be shared? – ePCS / KIS – Other communication
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Which patients is ePCS / KIS for? Patients with supportive / palliative care needs – Whoever YOU feel should be included! – Palliative care register – GSF register – SPICT / GSFS prognostication guidance? – Chronic disease registers? – Care Home patients?? – Housebound patients???
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What is ePCS / KIS for? Information transfer – ‘In Hours’ GP > OOH – Primary Care > A&E / Acute Receiving Units – Primary Care > Scottish Ambulance Service Prompts for proactive care Anticipatory Care Planning All data stored in one place Structure for lists / meetings / etc Palliative care DES
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What does ePCS / KIS contain? Information upload – Palliative Care review date – Consent to share information Current situation – Diagnoses – Key personnel involved – Carer details – Current treatment Repeat Last 30 days Acute – Patient & carer understanding Diagnosis & Prognosis
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What does ePCS / KIS contain? Future Care Plan – Patient wishes (VISION) – Preferred Place of Care – Resuscitation status – Additional drugs in house (Just in Case) – Advice for OOH GP e.g. Contact own GP OOH GP willingness to sign death certificate – Additional OOH information (KEY section) e.g. Patient wishes Starting Liverpool Care Pathway Etc…
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The ACP Checklist Capacity – Power of Attorney / Possible future problems? Have we considered – What is likely & what might happen to this patient? – Where the patient would like to be cared for? – CPR / DNACPR? – OOH information transfer (ePCS / KIS) Have we considered the possible need for – Anticipatory prescribing (Just in Case) – RN Verification of Expected Death – The Liverpool Care Pathway for the Dying The patient / carer view – My Thinking Ahead & Making Plans…
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