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End of Life Care - The Importance of
Advance Care Planning
Lucy Sutton
Associate Director, End of Life Care Programme –
NHS South Central
Helps all those with advanced, progressive, incurable illness to live as well as possible until they die. It enables the supportive and palliative care needs of both patient and family to be identified and met throughout the last phase of life and into bereavement. It includes management of pain and other symptoms and provision of psychological, social, spiritual and practical support. The definition of the beginning of end of life care is variable according to individual person and professional perspectives.
For some the start may be at the time of diagnosis of a condition which usually carries a poor prognosis, for example motor neurone disease or advanced liver disease. For others it will be at a point when there is a deterioration in a chronic illness and it becomes apparent that the likely prognosis is measured in months or possibly a year or two. Alternatively, it could be an elderly person who is becoming increasingly frail and recognises that they need increased help to continue living at home, or makes the decision to become a resident of a care home or of sheltered or extra care accommodation.
• 32,751 deaths per year
• 20,943 (64%) hospital deaths
• 2-3 admissions in year before death, 18 (6-40) days
• 3886 (19%) had CPR
• 54% complaints
• £52.5m - hosp FCE ending in death
• estimated £98m/yr on EOLC
END OF LIFE CARE PROGRAMME GOVERNANCE STRUCTURE
Programme BoardChair Katherine Fenton (SRO)
SHA EXEC TEAMKatherine Fenton
Organ Donation subgroup and work programme inc public
awareness
Local Implementation
Groups
DNACPR implementa
tion subgroup
Standards and Metrics
work programme inc VOICEs
PCT EoLC Steering Groups
Transition/ QIPP
Subgroup Priorities:• Identification/locality registers• Assessment/Care planning/ACP• Enhanced community care model• Sustainability
Training and
education
subgroup inc
elearning
Palliative Care Network Groups
Dementia and EoLC Clinical Leaders Network
programme
Commissione
rs/ QIPP
subgroup
Care Homes Project
(housing and
domiciliary care)
Timely end of life care which is planned, where possible and delivered by the
appropriate person to meet the needs of the patient and family 24 hours a day.
This care will respond flexibly and rapidly to changing need.
Recognition
CommunicationMDT Unified Assessment/ care planning
Registration
Key Worker
Establish Preferences
Regular review
Effective 24/7 contact point
ACP - Anticipate/ react to escalating needs
Planning
24 hour care available
LCP
Care After Death
Training and communication Service Organisation, training and communication
Advance Care Plans
• Advance care planning (ACP) is a key element of the End of Life Care (EoLC) Pathway and a key element of EoLC QIPP.
• Early identification of potential patients and communication of this across settings and sectors
• EoLC assessment and care planning• advance care planning for all high risk patients.• Enhanced community settings to support disinvestment
in acute care.• Transition into new NHS Structures
"It is only by knowing people's wishes that we can put in place the services to ensure they are met."
Choice - preferred and actual place of death
0%
10%
20%
30%
40%
50%
60%
70%
80%
90%
100%
Preference forplace of death
Where peoplewith cancer die
Where people die-all causes
Other
Nursinghome
Hospital
Hospice
Home
Advance Care Plans-Costs to the System
• On average a quarter of health care costs are consumed in the last year of life (Wanless)
• If inappropriate admissions were reduced by 10%, and av LoS by 3 days, £104 million would be available to enhance community services
• 40% of people dying in acute hospitals didn’t have medical need - £4.5 m over a year
• £1m a year spent on resolving complaints
• 59% of admissions from care homes could have been avoided
• Futile and inappropriate treatments - *40% of resus inappropriate – cost to SCAS per person £642 (£334.610) with uDNACPR £256 (£133,376). Cost to acute £392 (£505,789) with uDNACPR £142 (£53,392)
• Steep rise in the death rate
• People dying at older ages with multiple co-morbidities including dementia, living alone
• NAO estimated that 92% of deaths are predictable –evidence shows that only 27% of expected deaths on a EoLC register, and only 57% offered a discussion about their preferences.
It’s not easy to talk about end of life issues but it’s important to do. Now that we’ve put our affairs in order and talked about what we want, we can “put that in a box” as it were, and get on with living one day at a time, cherishing each day together, as I know it’s going to end one day”
(Carer of patient with COPD).
“If you talk about dying, you can say everything you want/need to. There are no regrets”.
(Wife of man who died of cancer)
“If you talk about it, you can make the most of life”.
(COPD patient)
“It’s normal – it’s going to happen to us all at some point!”
(COPD patient)
“ Would I be surprised if this person died within the next year?”
– The need to have open body language.
– Maintaining eye contact.– Asking open questions to explore worries.
“Can you tell me how you are feeling?”
“Is there anything you would like to discuss about the future?”
These are very open questions and you may be surprised how willing people are to talk once the conversation is initiated. You should always give the resident the choice of whether they have the conversation in private just with yourself or with family/carer present. Often, once staff have built up the confidence to start the conversation they are surprised to find that the resident has been desperate for this conversation to happen for some time.
– However there may be points at which the resident’s feelings, wishes and needs may require more probing. Some questions can help with this, such as:
“What happened next?”“What else was happening?”
If it does not feel right to use probing questions a good way to help people open up is to reflect back to them what they have said to then explore this further, such as:
“So you mentioned the shock at hearing the news, what happened next?”“So you felt upset by the symptoms he was describing?”
If you are not sure you have correctly interpreted what they are saying then
residents can find it reassuring if you check as this shows them you think they are important and worth listening to.
“Am I right to think that you were confused by what the doctor told you?”
There are certain times when you need a direct reply so it is best to ask a closed question, such as:
“Do you want to be called if s/he deteriorates further?”Maintaining eye contact is important, sitting within a comfortable distance and having open body language i.e. hands by your side or on your lap. To show the resident, family/carer that what they are saying is important to you don’t change the subject, but instead, ask open exploratory questions, don’t give advice early but help them to explore their feelings and therefore formulate their own answers.
Advance Care Planning-Dementia
• Both the End of Life Care Strategy and the Dementia Strategy emphasise care planning
• The Dementia Strategy emphasises the need for early care planning for dementia patients
• This will allow dementia patients to make choices in advance, if they wish
• Advance Care Plans will help ensure that people receive the care they want, where they want it
• The Dementia Strategy works on early diagnosis to lay the foundations for this to happen
How confident do you feel helping a resident with dementia advance care plan?
How confident do you feel with the Mental Capacity Act?
Advance Care Planning Advance Decisions to Refuse Treatment
DNACPR
This is a process of discussion between an individual and their care providers irrespective of discipline. The difference between ACP and planning more generally is that the process of ACP is to make clear a person’s wishes and will usually take place in the context of an anticipated deterioration in the individual’s condition in the future, with attendant loss of capacity to make decisions and/or ability to communicate wishes to others.
These must relate to a refusal of specific medical treatment and can specify circumstances. It will come into effect when the individual has lost capacity to give or refuse consent to treatment. Careful assessment of the validity and applicability of an advance decision is essential before it is used in clinical practice. Valid advance decisions, which are refusals of treatment, are legally binding.
A DNACPR decision applies to CPR only, other ceilings of treatment need to be discussed. A DNACPR is a method of communicating a medical instruction, a clinical decision made on best interests relevant to the disease of the person.
A thought
“If you don’t know where you are going, you’ll probably end up somewhere else”
(Laurence J Peter, 1919-90, Canadian academic andexpert on organised hierarchies, from his 1969 bookThe Peter Principle.)
NHS South Central Adult Advance Care Planning Toolkit
This toolkit contains:
1. Details of the training available to support people in ACP.
2. Information for the public and for patients residents in the form of Planning for your Future Care which can be provided in GP reception areas, libraries, Citizens Advice Bureaus etc and more detailed information for patients for use during consultation with health and social care professionals will be available soon.
3. Information for health and social care professionals which includes a factsheet of the key points and process to follow and more detailed information on ACP and how to have the conversation.
4. Examples of different forms that can be used for ACP.
5. Signposting to further information around each of the aspects covered above.
For more information on all eolc work in SC visit http://www.southcentral.nhs.uk/what-we-are-doing/end-of-life-care/