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The Project to Educate Physicians on End-of-life Care Supported by the American Medical Association and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. Goals of Care. Module 7. Objectives . . . Understand the different goals and how they interrelate and change
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The Project to Educate Physicians on End-of-life CareSupported by the American Medical Association andthe Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Goals of Care Module 7
Objectives . . . • Understand the different goals and how they interrelate and change • Understand how to use the 7-step protocol to negotiate goals of care • Be able to communicate prognosis and its uncertainty • Understand how to tell the truth and identify reasonable hope
. . . Objectives • Be able to use language effectively • Be able to set limits on unreasonable goals • Be able to adjust care and communication according to culture • Understand how to identify goals when patients lack capacity
Introduction . . . • Every one has a personal sense of • who we are • what we like to do • control we like to have • goals for our lives • things we hope for
. . . Introduction • Hope, goals, expectations change with illness • Physician’s role to clarify goals, treatment plan
Cure of disease Avoidance of premature death Maintenance or improvement in function Prolongation of life Relief of suffering Quality of life Staying in control A good death Support for families and loved ones Potential goals of care
Historically, a dichotomous division of goals of care • Focus on curing illness • Little attention to relief of suffering, care of dying • Hospice / palliative care arose in response to a need
Figure 1: A dichotomous intent Curative / life-prolonging therapy Presentation Death Relieve suffering (hospice)
Multiple goals of care • Multiple goals often apply simultaneously • Goals are often contradictory • Certain goals may take priority over others
Goals may change • Some take precedence over others • The shift in focus of care • is gradual • is an expected part of the continuum of medical care
Figure 2: The interrelationship of therapies with curative and palliative intent Curative / life-prolonging therapy Presentation Death Relieve suffering (palliative care)
Palliative care: expanding the options . . . • Interdisciplinary care • Symptom control • Supportive care
. . . Palliative care: expanding the options • Any life-threatening diagnosis • Anytime during illness • Whenever patient / family prepared to accept it • May be combined with curative therapies • May be focus of care
7-step protocol to negotiate goals of care . . . 1. Create the right setting 2. Determine what the patient and family know 3. Explore what they are expecting or hoping for
. . . 7-step protocol to negotiate goals of care 4. Suggest realistic goals 5. Respond empathically 6. Make a plan and follow-through 7. Review and revise periodically, as appropriate
Communicating prognosis • Markedly over-estimate prognosis • Helps patient / family cope, plan • increase access to hospice, other services • Offer a range or average for life expectancy
Truth-telling and maintaining hope • False hope may deflect from other important issues • True clinical skill to help find hope for realistic goals
Language with unintended consequences • Do you want us to do everything possible? • Will you agree to discontinue care? • It’s time we talk about pulling back • I think we should stop aggressive therapy • I’m going to make it so he won’t suffer
Language to describethe goals of care . . . • I want to give the best care possible until the day you die • We will concentrate on improving the quality of your child’s life • We want to help you live meaningfully in the time that you have
Language to describethe goals of care . . . • I’ll do everything I can to help you maintain your independence • I want to ensure that your father receives the kind of treatment he wants • Your child’s comfort and dignity will be my top priority
. . . Language to describethe goals of care • I will focus my efforts on treating your symptoms • Let’s discuss what we can do to fulfill your wish to stay at home • Let’s discuss what we can do to have your child die at home
Cultural differences • Who gets the information? • How to talk about information? • Who makes decisions? • Ask the patient • Consider a family meeting
Determine specific priorities • Based on values, preferences, clinical circumstances • Influenced by information from physician, team members
Reviewing goals,treatment priorities • Goals guide care • Assess priorities to develop initial plan of care • Review with any change in • health status • advancing illness • setting of care • treatment preferences
When the physician cannot support a patient’s choices • Typically occurs when goals are unreasonable, illegal • Set limits without implying abandonment • Make the conflict explicit • Try to find an alternate solution
Reassess decision-making capacity . . . • Implies the ability to understand and make own decision • Patient must • understand information • use the information rationally • appreciate the consequences • come to a reasonable decision for him or her
. . . Reassess decision-making capacity • Any physician can determine • Capacity varies by decision • Other cognitive abilities do not need to be intact
When a patient lacks capacity . . . • Proxy decision-maker • Sources of information • written advance directives • patient’s verbal statements • patient’s general values and beliefs • how patient lived his / her life • best interest determinations
. . . When a patient lacks capacity • Why turn to others • respects patient • builds trust • reduces guilt and decision-regret
Goals of Care Summary