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AOA Council on Palliatve Care Goals of Care. Breaking Bad News Unity Convention October 24, 2010 Bruce Bates, D.O., FACOFP , CMD Chair - Department of Geriatric Medicine University of New England College of Osteopathic Medicine. Case .
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AOA Council on Palliatve CareGoals of Care Breaking Bad News Unity Convention October 24, 2010 Bruce Bates, D.O., FACOFP, CMD Chair - Department of Geriatric Medicine University of New England College of Osteopathic Medicine
Case • 84 y/o W/F living independently, falls at home suffering L femur Fx • Undergoes ORIF with post op delerium, dysphagia, renal failure. • Aspirates, intubated difficult to wean • Attentive daughter
Case continued • Day #14 – many doctors talk to daughter • Nephrologist: making more urine but probably will need dialysis long term • Intensivist: able to turn O2 down to 50% • Gastroenterologist: plan for a PEG will never eat regular • Internist – not doing well • Case manager – doctor ordered hospice • Daughter calls PCP to complain
Objectives . . . • Know why defining goals fo care is important • Understand a 7-step protocol for delivering bad news • Communicate uncertainty and conflict • Adjust care to changing goals
Importance of Goals of Care • Most people want to Know if facing a serious illness • Strengthens the physician- patient relationship • Fosters collaboration • Establishes an appropriate allocation of resources • Permits patients, families to plan, cope
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
Osteopathic Tenet THE WHOLE PERSON BODY MIND SPIRIT
Multiple goals of care • Multiple goals often apply simultaneously • Goals are often contradictory • Certain goals may take priority over others
Patient Centered Care • Goals of Patient - initial assessment • May Vary over time - ongoing assessment • curative palliative • self family • physical spiritual • integrated focused
Goals may change • Osteopathic Principles make very clear the distinction of caring for disease and caring for the patient who has disease • Some goals take precedence over others • The shift in focus of care • Requires the patient (Guardian) to understand • is gradual • is an expected part of the continuum of medical care
7-step protocol to communicate bad news . . . 1. Create the right setting 2. Determine what the patient and family know 3. What do they want to Know
. . . 7-step protocol to negotiate goals of care 4. Sharing the information 5. Respond with empathy 6. Make a plan and follow-through 7. Review and revise periodically, as appropriate
1. Create the Right Setting • Quiet - private space • Allot enough open ended time • Determine that the right people are present • FAMILY CLERGY GUARDIAN OTHER
2. What Does the Patient Know • Establish Patients Knowledge and Understanding • Asses ability to comprehend • Correct misunderstanding • Reschedule if unprepared or unresolvable conflict of info
3. How Much Does the Patient Want to Know • Recognize patient preferences • May decline voluntarily • May designate someone to communicate on his/her behalf • Consider Power of Attorney or advanced directive – 5 wishes
3. How much does the patient want to know? • People handle information differently • Capacity • Race • Ethnicity • Religion • Education • Socio economic • Age and developmental level
Cultural differences • Who gets the information? • How to talk about information? • Who makes decisions? • Ask the patient • Consider a family meeting
4. Sharing the Information • Say it then STOP • Avoid monologue- promote dialogue • Avoid Jargon and Euphemisms • Pause frequently • Validate understanding • Use Silence and Body Language • Don’t minimize severity • Implications of “I’m Sorry”
Language with unintended consequences -Negative • 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 - positive . . • I want to seek the most comfort and dignity possible until the day you die • We will concentrate on improving the quality of your child’s remaining life • Let’s discuss your needs and wants
5. Respond with Empathy • Affective response • Tears anger sadness love anxiety relief • Cognitive response • Denial blame guilt disbelief fear loss shame • Basic psychophysiologic response • Fight – Flight
5. Respond with Empathy • Listen ListenListen • Encourage descriptions of Feelings • Use Non Verbal communication • Physician: Acknowledge Yurself
6. Planning and followup • Explore what their hopes expectations and Fears are • Plan for Next Steps • Added tests, treatment/non treatment, • Care vs cure, referrals • Sources of Support for patient/family • Medical, spiritual, emotional, social, legal
7. Review and Revise • Give Contact info / next appointment • Assess Safety • Assess informal and formal support • Be Prepared to repeat info at next visit – it was not all heard • Goals Change with time and progression of condition
Reviewing goals,treatment priorities • Goals guide care – whose? • Assess priorities to develop initial plan of care • Review with any change in • health status • advancing illness • setting of care • treatment preferences
Communicating prognosis • Providers markedly over-estimate prognosis • Either way raises fears and stresses • 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
When Family Says:“Don’t Tell” • Ask Family • Why not? What are you afraid I will say? • What are previous experiences? • Personal,religious, or cultural context? • Patient knows something - why this conspiracy? Will it feed mistrust? • Talk To patient together • Legal Obligation to obtain consent to treat or not treat (assuming capacity)
Determine specific priorities • Based on Patient values, preferences, clinical circumstances • Influenced by information from physician(s), team members, Patient and family • Clinical Jazz
Summary • Begin the conversation Early • Keep seven steps in mind • Understand the Goal of Care • Patient centered values and preferences • Seek permission to involve family and others • Give Permission to react/accept/reject • Revise and renew
IATP IT’s ABOUT THE PATIENT