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POLST. Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment Adrienne Mims, MD Georgia POLST Collaborative Member. POLST. Th e Role of POLST in Advance Care Planning How and when to use the POLST forms. Advance Care Planning. End-of-Life Principles. End-Of-Life Care Is About:
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POLST Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment Adrienne Mims, MD Georgia POLST Collaborative Member
POLST • The Role of POLST in Advance Care Planning • How and when to use the POLST forms
End-of-Life Principles • End-Of-Life Care Is About: • Compassion at the bedside • Providing comfort • Honoring patients’ preferences
Advance Care Planning • A Discussion With Loved Ones • Advance Directive - Living Will and Durable Power of Attorney • POLST - Physician Order for Life Sustaining Treatment • A Discussion With Loved Ones
POLST • An order that makes a patient’s end of life wishes actionable • Five sections • Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation • Medical Interventions • Antibiotics • Artificially Administered Nutrition • Signatures (2) • The POLST – transferred between different settings
Legal Foundations • Advance Directive • Ga. AD Law - 2007 HB 24 • Ga. Dept. Of Human Resources • 2007 HB 24 Rules And Regulations • Ga. DNR/AND & Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation Laws • Physician Order For Life Sustaining Treatment (POLST) • Ga. DPH, POLST Form, 2012 • Ga. Code 29-4-18 (l)
When to use POLST When, in the judgment of the physician, one of “Three Conditions” is met • A patient is in a terminal condition • A patient is in a permanent state of unconsciousness • In medical judgment CPR would be futile
Admission to a Health Care Facility • To identify or determine: • Health Care Advocate’s name • Patient’s medical state • Code status based on • Patients wishes • Presence of the “Three Conditions”
Health Care Team • Responsibilities: • To follow the patient’s known preferences • To honor the patient’s Advance Directive and POLST without regard to personal views • If unable to honor preferences, facilitate the transfer of patient’s care
LTC Implementation Case 1 – patient competent – complete advance directives (AD), complete POLST – MD and patient signs Case 2 – patient NOT competent – previously completed AD, complete POLST – MD and designee signs Case 3 – patient NOT competent – no prior AD – POLST from hospital is signature #1, LTC MD is signature #2 written in the chart
‘Getting it Right’ • Honor all patients wishes • Encourage all patients to have an Advance Care Plan • Utilize POLST when patient condition applies • Apply reasonable medical judgment
Conversation Project • Veteran Boston journalist Ellen Goodman • Launched in August 2012 • Backing from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement • www.theconversationproject.org
Georgia POLST Collaborative • 20+ statewide organizations • Part of an national movement to promote POLST • Vision: All Georgians will have their health care preferences known and honored
Spring POLST Collaborative Conference Date: May 6, 2013Location : Westin Peachtree BuckheadTime: 10 a.m. – 4 p.m.Keynote: Patricia Bomba, MD New York MOLST
Questions This material was shared by the POLST Georgia Collaborative and prepared by Alliant GMCF, the Medicare Quality Improvement Organization for Georgia, under contract with the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), an agency of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. The contents presented do not necessarily reflect CMS policy. Publication No. 10SOW-GA-IIPC-13-05