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End of life care: using evidence

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Phil McCarvill, Head of Policy and Public Affairs at Marie Curie Cancer Care spoke at Commissioning Live on 26 March 2014 on 'End of life: using evidence'. Using evidence that is currently available such as the Marie Curie Atlas; independent evaluations (e.g. Nuffield Trust); user, patient and carer feedback and social media, we are continuing to increase our understanding of experiences of end of life care. Marie Curie is using this evidence and responding to feedback when we work with commissioners around the country to redesign end services. For more information on commissioning, have a look at our website mariecurie.org.uk/commissioning or get in touch at [email protected]
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END OF LIFE CARE : USING EVIDENCE Dr Phil McCarvill @MarieCuriePA 26 March 2014 @MarieCurieEOLC
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Page 1: End of life care: using evidence

END OF LIFE CARE : USING EVIDENCE

Dr Phil McCarvill @MarieCuriePA26 March 2014 @MarieCurieEOLC

Page 2: End of life care: using evidence

MARIE CURIE CANCER CARE

• Major UK end of life charity • Major service provider – Network of 2000 Nurses caring for

people in the last few hours and days of life – 1.3 million hours of nursing in 2012-13

• 9 hospices across the UK reach 8,000 people each year• Our services reached a total of 38,777 people in 2012-13• Major funder of academic and health service research with an

Open Access research policy • Working to influence policy and practice through our policy

and public affairs work.

Page 3: End of life care: using evidence

DELIVERING HIGH QUALITY SERVICES

Page 4: End of life care: using evidence

UNDERSTANDING THE EVIDENCE: MARIE CURIE END OF LIFE CARE ATLAS

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Page 5: End of life care: using evidence

DEMONSTRATING IMPACT – INDEPENDENT EVALUATIONS

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Page 6: End of life care: using evidence

USING EVIDENCE: USER FEEDBACK

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Page 7: End of life care: using evidence

TALKING TO TERMINALLY ILL PEOPLE AND THEIR FAMILIES

Page 8: End of life care: using evidence

USING SOCIAL MEDIA

Page 9: End of life care: using evidence

WHAT DO WE KNOW?

• Analysis of high quality studies – preferences for ‘home death’ range from 31% to 87% (PHE, What we know now 2013)

• VOICES Survey – 80% said that their relative had wanted to die at home, however only 41% answered yes to “Did he/she ever say where he/she would like to die?”

• Increase in number of people dying in their usual place of residence (latest data 44.2%) compared to 37.9% in 2008), but still a long way to go.

• Consensus that the majority do not want to die in hospital

Page 10: End of life care: using evidence

HOSPITALS ARE NOT THE RIGHT PLACES FOR MOST PEOPLE TO DIE

• Majority of those who die in hospital have no clinical need to be there

• For many units dying is not their ‘core business’• Environment and other pressures may not lend

themselves to specialist care for dying people• Some dying people end up in hospital because the wider

health & social care system cannot move quick enough to put together the right package of care to enable them to die in the place of their choice.

• The care they receive when they end up in hospital is perceived to be poorer than that in other settings.

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Page 11: End of life care: using evidence

WE KNOW WHAT TERMINALLY ILL PEOPLE AND FAMILIES WANT

• More community nursing & support ‘at home’• Joined up services – no gaps • Whole family approaches• Better advice and sign-posting• Better communication • More hospice provision • Consistency of care standards• Better hospital care • Bereavement support

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Page 12: End of life care: using evidence

COMMUNITY SERVICES IMPROVE OUTCOMES

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Source: Nuffield Trust, The Impact of the Marie Curie Nursing Service on Place of Death and Hospital Use at the End of Life, 2012

Page 13: End of life care: using evidence

WHAT THE SYSTEM NEEDS

• Over-reliance on hospital based care – with poorer outcomes

• The system cannot deliver as it is currently configured• Most people do not want to die in hospital, have no need

to be there & experience poorer care if they end up there• Evidence should give us confidence to shift away from our

current reliance on hospitals. • Take advantage of the alignment of people want and what

the system needs to bring about fundamental change. • Need to improve aspects of care in other parts of the

wider health and social care system 13

Page 14: End of life care: using evidence

WE NEED TO REDESIGN SERVICES 14

• The current configuration of services cannot deliver the change we need• Rebalance acute and community services• Whole systems approach – with a constant focus on improving outcomes for terminally ill people• MCCC is currently working with Commissioners across the UK to redesign services• MCCC is exploring innovative ways to fund end of life care and to create the space for commissioners to make bold decisions.

Page 15: End of life care: using evidence

THANK YOU

FOR YOUR TIME


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