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GP ST 1

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GP ST 1&2 PALLIATIVE CARE & ETHICS Rosalie Dunn Adam Hay Carolyn Mackay Euan Paterson – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: GP ST 1


1
GP ST 12PALLIATIVE CARE ETHICS
  • Rosalie Dunn
  • Adam Hay
  • Carolyn Mackay
  • Euan Paterson

2
Palliative Care and Ethics
  • 0845 Registration
  • 0900 Palliative care Planning in an
    uncertain world
  • 1015 Coffee / Tea
  • 1030 Care in the Last Stages of Life
  • 1145 Symptom Relief in Palliative Care
  • 1245 Dining with death!
  • 1330 End of Life Ethics
  • 1445 Coffee / Tea
  • 1500 The Good Death
  • 1630 Feedback / Close

3
Some 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
  • The failed attempt at CPR
  • The weekend catastrophe
  • The bad death
  • and then 4 hours to confirm it happened!

4
Who are we talking about?
  • What cohort of patients do YOU think we are
    talking about?

5
Who is WHO talking about?
  • Palliative care is an approach that improves the
    quality of life of patients and their families
    facing the problems associated with
    life-threatening illness, through the prevention
    and relief of suffering by means of early
    identification and impeccable assessment and
    treatment of pain and other problems, physical,
    psychosocial and spiritual.
  • World Health Organisation

6
Who is Chuck talking about?
  • Marla doesnt have testicular cancer. Marla
    doesnt have Tb. She isnt dying.
  • Okay in that brainy brain-food philosophy way,
    were all dying, but Marla isnt dying the way
    Chloe is dying
  • Chuck Palahniuk - Fight Club

7
Who are we talking about?
  • Probability / possibility
  • Uncertainty
  • What about
  • Renal failure / dialysis
  • Advanced lung cancer
  • COPD
  • 93 year old / multi-morbidity / dementia

8
Who are we talking about?
  • Probability / possibility
  • Uncertainty
  • What about
  • Renal failure / dialysis / decision taken to stop
    dialysis
  • Advanced lung cancer / semi-conscious / no fluids
  • COPD / chest infection
  • 93 year old / multi-morbidity / dementia / UTI

9
How do we decide?
  • Consider dying as a possibility!
  • What primary disease do they suffer from?

10
Numbers and Trajectories
GP has 20 deaths per list of 2000 patients
per year
11
Diagnosing dying
  • Personal trajectory
  • How are they at this moment?
  • How were they?
  • How rapidly are they changing?
  • Would you be surprised?

12
Who are we talking about?
  • Patients with supportive / palliative care needs
  • Whoever YOU feel should be included!
  • And consider
  • Palliative care register
  • Gold Standards Framework register
  • SPICT / GSFS prognostication guidance?
  • Chronic disease registers?
  • Care Home patients??
  • Housebound patients???

13
(No Transcript)
14
The 10 Cs of Care of the Dying
  • C 1 Consider dying as a possibility
  • C 2 Competence
  • C 3 Compassion
  • C 4 Capacity
  • C 5 Communication
  • C 6 Current needs
  • C 7 Ceilings of treatment and intervention
  • C 8 Care planning
  • C 9 Care in the last stages of life
  • C 10 Continuing care

15
C 1 Consider dying as a possibility
  • The last dozen slides

16
C 2 Competence
  • Your own!
  • Do you have enough knowledge skills?
  • Diagnostic accuracy
  • Knowledge of condition, natural history,
    interventions
  • Communication skills
  • Do you have enough experience?
  • Do you need help?
  • Who / where can you get help from?

17
C 3 Compassion
  • Later!

18
C 4 Capacity
  • Does the patient have capacity?
  • If not do they have a legally appointed
    representative e.g. PoA or Guardian?
  • Other medico-legal aspects
  • Consent (KIS / ePCS)
  • Advance decision to refuse treatment

19
C 5 Communication
  • Who needs to know?
  • What needs to be known?
  • How can we make communication better?

20
Who needs to know?
  • Patient / family / loved ones
  • Professionals
  • e.g. Partners, Nurses, OOH, SAS, Acute,
    Specialists, Social Workers, Social Carers,
    Reception staff, Minister, Priest

21
What needs to be known by Professionals?
  • Patient / family / loved ones views
  • What is important to them?
  • What do they want?
  • What do they not want?
  • Who else do they want involved?
  • (Are these the same?)
  • An Advance Statement

22
An Advance Statement
  • Statement of values
  • E.g. what makes life worth living
  • What patient wishes
  • E.g. aggressiveness of treatment, place of care,
    place of death, admission
  • What patient does not want
  • E.g. PEG feeding, SC fluids, CPR, non-admission
  • Who they would wish consulted

23
What needs to be known by Professionals?
  • Patient / family / loved ones views
  • What is important to them?
  • What do they want?
  • What do they not want?
  • Who else do they want involved?
  • (Are these the same?)
  • An Advance Statement
  • All the other professional views!

24
What needs to be known by patient / family /
loved ones?
  • Professional views
  • Possibility / probability of death
  • Prognostic uncertainty
  • What we know or suspect
  • What we are concerned about
  • What the plans are
  • (Are these the same?!)
  • That you care!

25
How can we make communication better?
  • Gathering
  • Using our vast communication skills!
  • My Thinking Ahead Making Plans (MTAMP)

26
The views and wishes of patient / carer
  • My thinking ahead and making plans
  • Whats 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

27
How can we make communication better?
  • Gathering
  • Using our vast communication skills!
  • My Thinking Ahead Making Plans (MTAMP)
  • Sharing
  • Record it!
  • In conversation telephone / face to face
  • Letters / email
  • Key Information summary (KIS)

28
What is KIS for?
  • Information transfer
  • In Hours GP to OOH GP
  • Primary Care to AE / Acute Receiving Units
  • Primary Care to Scottish Ambulance Service
  • Primary Care to Specialist Palliative Care
  • Prompts for proactive care
  • Anticipatory Care Planning
  • All data stored in one place
  • Structure for lists / meetings / etc
  • Palliative care DES

29
What does KIS contain?
  • 0 - Consent
  • 1 Demographics
  • 2 Current situation
  • 3 Care Support
  • 4 Resuscitation Preferred Place of Care
  • 5 Palliative Care

30
0 - Consent
  • KIS Upload decision
  • Patient consented?
  • Apply Special Note
  • KIS Review date

31
1 Demographics
  • Patient Details
  • Practice Details
  • Usual GP
  • Patients Emergency Contact Number
  • Carers
  • Next of Kin
  • Access Information

32
2 Current Situation
  • Medical History
  • Self Management Plan(s)
  • Anticipatory Care Plan
  • Single Shared Assessment
  • Oxygen
  • Additional Drugs Available at Home
  • Catheter and Continence Equipment at Home

33
3 Care Support
  • Agency Contact
  • Moving and handling Equipment at Home
  • Syringe Driver (sic)
  • Adults with Incapacity Form
  • Power of Attorney
  • Guardianship with Welfare Decision Making Powers

34
4 Resuscitation Preferred Place of Care
  • Preferred Place of Care
  • DNACPR
  • CYPADM

35
5 Palliative Care
  • Palliative Care Register
  • OOH Arrangements
  • Discussed with patient / carer
  • GP sign death certificate
  • GP should be contacted OOH / Contact Number(s)
  • Patients / Carers understanding
  • Diagnosis
  • Prognosis
  • Palliative care and Treatment

36
C 6 Current needs
  • Physical
  • Symptom relief
  • Bowel / bladder care
  • Oral care
  • (Hydration)
  • Psychological
  • Personal
  • Social
  • Spiritual / Existential (the inner self)

37
C 8 Care Planning (Anticipatory)
  • Plan A
  • Active treatment aimed at recovery
  • Plan B
  • Active treatment aimed at a good and dignified
    death

38
Break!
  • What are the similarities and differences between
    Plan A Plan B?

39
C 8 Care Planning (Anticipatory)
  • Plan A
  • Active treatment aimed at recovery
  • Plan B
  • Active treatment aimed at a good and dignified
    death
  • What are the similarities and differences between
    Plan A Plan B?

40
Similarities Differences?
  • Similarities
  • Almost everything!
  • Differences
  • Seriousness of dying/death
  • Ceilings of treatment / intervention
  • Anything else?

41
C 7 Ceilings of treatment / intervention
  • Some ceilings
  • Transplant(!!)
  • Dialysis ventilation cardiac devices(!)
  • CPR

42
DNACPR Framework
  • Is the patient at risk of a cardiopulmonary
    arrest?
  • Decision making
  • CPR is unlikely to be successful due to
  • The likely outcome of successful CPR would not be
    of overall benefit to the patient
  • decided with patient
  • decided with legally appointed...
  • ...basis of overall benefit...
  • CPR is not in accord with a valid advance
    healthcare directive/decision (living will) which
    is applicable to the current circumstances

43
DNACPR Decision making
  • Is CPR realistically likely to succeed?
  • What do we mean by success?
  • Sit up and have a cup of tea
  • Population that we are considering
  • Candidate for admission to HDU?
  • Facilities available
  • People available

44
Introducing the subject of DNACPR
  • Communication
  • Breaking bad news
  • Narrowing the information / knowledge gap
  • We know something we think they need to know!
  • CPR would be futile or
  • CPR would not be futile and so do they want it?
  • How much do they actually know?
  • How much more, if any, do they want to know
  • When do they want to know
  • Who do they want to tell them

45
Discussing DNACPR
  • Know the patient and their context
  • Be clear about benefit/burden balance of CPR (Rx)
  • (Consider benefit/burden balance of discussion)
  • Consider who should discuss
  • Consider when to discuss
  • Often less difficult earlier in disease
  • Small chunks and check (BBN)
  • Aim is to Allow a Natural Death
  • Discussion on CPR should be part of wider
    discussion
  • Compassion!

46
Getting CPR raised
  • By patient and carer
  • Spontaneously
  • Prompted
  • Another professional e.g. the hospital said
  • My Thinking Ahead Making Plans

47
Getting CPR raised
  • By us (in the course of a more general
    discussion)
  • How do you feel you are doing?
  • Where would you like to be cared for?
  • And if things got worse?
  • How do you see the future?
  • Are there any things youd like to avoid?
  • Etc etc etc
  • By us (more pushy)
  • If youre really keen to be kept at home then
  • what to do if there was a sudden change in your
    condition
  • what to do if your heart was to stop

48
CPR the subject matter
  • General
  • What it means
  • Allow a natural death
  • Likelihood of success
  • Whether people would wish it
  • Individual
  • In your case
  • Fine line
  • Awareness raising, BUT
  • Clinical decision has already been made

49
What DNACPR is not about
  • Anything other than CPR
  • Any other treatments e.g. antibiotics
  • Feeding
  • Fluids
  • Highlight everything else that we can still do

50
DNACPR Practicalities
  • Completing the DNACPR form
  • Where should form be kept
  • When to update form
  • Patient transfer
  • Communication
  • Patients home
  • Patient
  • Family / loved ones
  • OOH Services
  • Scottish Ambulance Service
  • Others?

51
DNACPR Fundamentals
  • The decision to offer CPR is a medical one
  • The decision has nothing to do with quality of
    life
  • If CPR is likely to be futile do not offer it
  • Patient / family view is only relevant if CPR is
    a treatment option
  • If success anticipated needs to be discussed
  • If success not anticipated patient needs to be
    informed
  • Relatives should not be asked to decide unless
    patient lacks capacity legally empowered to do
    so

52
C 7 Ceilings of treatment / intervention
  • Some ceilings
  • Transplant(!!)
  • Dialysis ventilation cardiac devices(!)
  • CPR
  • Surgery
  • Chemotherapy / Radiotherapy
  • Antibiotics I/V
  • Admission or transfer
  • Nutritional support
  • Hydration / S/C fluids
  • Blood tests (arterial, venous, capillary)
  • Antibiotics oral
  • Routine positional change

53
C 8 Care Planning
  • Probable / what is likely to happen
  • Possible / what might happen
  • Review ceilings of treatment / intervention
  • Review current needs
  • Review prescribing
  • Review processes
  • (Plan for death)

54
C 8 Care Planning
  • Plan A Active treatment aimed at improvement /
    recovery
  • Plan B Active treatment aimed at a good and
    dignified death
  • Acknowledge the uncertainty
  • Gradual / sudden shift from possibility of
    improvement
  • Death now inevitable
  • Plan B is the only option
  • Care in the Last Stages of Life

55
C 9 Care in the Last Stages of Life
  • Care considerations
  • Probable / what is likely to happen
  • Possible / what might happen
  • Review ceilings of treatment / intervention

56
C 9 Care in the Last Stages of Life
  • Review ceilings
  • Transplant(!!)
  • Dialysis / ventilation / cardiac devices(!)
  • CPR
  • Surgery
  • Chemotherapy / radiotherapy
  • Antibiotics I/V
  • Admission / transfer
  • Nutritional support
  • S/C fluids
  • Blood tests (arterial, venous, capillary)
  • Antibiotics oral

57
C 9 Care in the Last Stages of Life
  • Care considerations
  • Probable / what is likely to happen
  • Possible / what might happen
  • Review ceilings of treatment / intervention
  • Review current needs

58
C 9 Care in the Last Stages of Life
  • Review Current needs
  • Physical
  • Symptom relief
  • Bowel / bladder care
  • Oral care
  • (Hydration)
  • Psychological
  • Personal
  • Social
  • Spiritual (the inner self)

59
C 9 Care in the Last Stages of Life
  • Care considerations
  • Probable / what is likely to happen
  • Possible / what might happen
  • Review ceilings of treatment / intervention
  • Review current needs
  • Review prescribing

60
C 9 Care in the Last Stages of Life
  • Prescribing issues
  • What is essential?
  • What is not needed?
  • What to do with those in between?
  • What might be needed (Just in Case)?
  • Route of administration (S/C?)

61
C 9 Care in the Last Stages of Life
  • Care considerations
  • Probable / what is likely to happen
  • Possible / what might happen
  • Review ceilings of treatment / intervention
  • Review current needs
  • Review prescribing
  • Review processes

62
C 9 Care in the Last Stages of Life
  • Review processes
  • (DNACPR)
  • RNVoED
  • KIS

63
C 9 Care in the Last Stages of Life
  • Care considerations
  • Probable / what is likely to happen
  • Possible / what might happen
  • Review ceilings of treatment / intervention
  • Review current needs
  • Review prescribing
  • Review processes
  • Plan for death

64
C 10 Continuing care
  • Bereavement support
  • Ensure ALL practice staff know
  • Consider
  • Adding details to key relatives records
  • Contacting bereaved relative(s)
  • Informing other GP practices if bereaved not
    registered with practice
  • Consider possible need for additional support

65
Knowledge
K
66
Skills
K
S
67
Attitudes
68
C 3 Compassion
  • Show that we care!
  • Be polite and courteous
  • Make it personal
  • Show interest
  • Give your time (even when you have very little!)
  • Add little touches
  • Unbidden Acts of Human Kindness(!)
  • Empathy Compassion
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