240 likes | 275 Views
Advance Care Planning. Dr Regina McQuillan FRCPI. What is planned?. Why? Who? How? When? Where?. Advance Care Planning.
E N D
Advance Care Planning Dr Regina McQuillan FRCPI
What is planned? • Why? • Who? • How? • When? • Where?
Advance Care Planning • Decisions made now, in anticipation of changing health status, when it is expected the patient or decision makers will not be in a position to make the same carefully reasoned decision.
What is planned? • Level of intervention for investigation or treatment • Place of care • Place of residence
Interventions - General • Hospital transfer • Intravenous antibiotics • Intravenous fluids • Subcutaneous fluids • Gastrostomy (PEG or RIG) • Ventilation
Interventions - Specific • To address likely outcomes of particular illness
Motor Neurone Disease • Gastrostomy • Non-Invasive ventilation (NIPPY) • Invasive ventilation
Implanted Cardiac Debrillators • Switching off
Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease • Ventilation • ICU
Dementia • Tube Feeding • Intravenous Antibiotics • Hospital Admission
Why engage in Advance Care Planning? • Appropriate planned decisions
Why engage in Advance Care Planning? • No legal or ethical obligation to provide all possible treatment • No obligation to provide futile treatment • Patient has the right to refuse treatment, even if life prolonging.
Who makes the plan? • Patient • Doctor • Multidisciplinary Team • Family • Hospital Team
Who makes the plan? • No one has the legal right or responsibility to make decisions about others health
When should plan be made? • Dependent on illness – natural history • Changes in health status – eg hospital/nursing home admission • Markers of deteriorating health
Where should plan be made? • Place of care • May be by joint, if patient moves from one care setting to another
How should plan be made? • Most Important
How should plan be made? If patient not competent - Doctor makes decision, in best interest of the patient, taking the known wishes and values of the patient into account, following wide consultation with family and the multidisciplinary team.
How should plan be made? • May be done in stages • Rarely emergency or urgent
How should plan be made? • Clearly documented • Consider ‘transfer document’
How should plan be made? • Reviewed as health status changes
Scope of Advance Care Plans • Must be legal
Scope of Advance Care Plans • Must be ethical - respect the autonomony of others - cannot require family to give all care, cannot require health care workers to treat patient unethically - respect distributive justice
Resources • www.bioethics.ie • www.resus.org/pages/dnar.htm • www.endoflifecareforadults.nhs.uk