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- a realistic approach to emergency anticipatory care planning

- a realistic approach to emergency anticipatory care planning. Dr Juliet Spiller Consultant in Palliative Medicine Marie Curie Hospice Edinburgh Juliet.spiller@mariecurie.org.uk @ JASpiller. What is ReSPECT ? Where ReSPECT come from and why? Forth Valley experience

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- a realistic approach to emergency anticipatory care planning

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  1. - a realistic approach to emergency anticipatory care planning • Dr Juliet Spiller • Consultant in Palliative Medicine • Marie Curie Hospice Edinburgh • Juliet.spiller@mariecurie.org.uk • @JASpiller

  2. What is ReSPECT? Where ReSPECT come from and why? Forth Valley experience Supporting realistic patient choice – explaining prognostic uncertainty, risk benefit balance,

  3. What is ? www.respectprocess.org.uk

  4. What is ? ReSPECT is a process, it is not a form

  5. What is ? • THE PROCESS prompts and supports person-centred, individualised conversations and planning (aka Realistic Medicine) about anticipated emergency care and treatment. • THE PROCESSis about respecting patient choice and respecting clinical judgment. • THEFORM simply communicates a summary of agreed realistic choices to guide clinical decision-making in a crisis. • THE FORMis what makes shared decision-making work for the patient in a crisis, in any care setting, when they cannot express their wishes.

  6. What is ? ReSPECTis a process which… supports and aligns with any ACP process or tool (including ‘myACP’, Living Will, ADRT, CYPACP, TEPs, TELPs etc) Can be used in all specialties, all care settings and with all ages ReSPECTis NOT…. Just about end of life care Just a new DNACPR form

  7. - Where did it come from? • NCEPOD (2012)– Time to Intervene? • Lack of appropriate advance decision-making • CPR attempted in 52patients with DNACPR decisions and 7 on end-of-life care pathways • CIPOLD (2013) • 42% premature deaths (n=238) • “inappropriate or poorly documented DNACPR orders” contributed to premature unexpected death

  8. - Where did it come from? Court of Appeal – Tracey 2014 “...presumption in favour of patient involvement... preserving Human Right to information” Winspear v Sunderland NHS FT • Where a patient lacks capacity: • Involve someone who knows them as long as it is ‘practicable and appropriate’

  9. - Where did it come from? UK-wide awareness that explicit focus on DNACPR decisions has been unhelpful / harmful • Wide variation in practice • Public mistrust, misunderstanding and frustration • Health and social care misunderstanding, communication failures and dislike of the conversation • Ongoing inappropriate CPR attempts and evidence of poor care and inappropriate escalation of care at times of crisis. _____________________________________________________________________________________________________________________ UK-wide awareness that conversations about ‘realistic’ treatment and care choices must be • prompted and supported • communicated seamlessly and robustly at times of crisis • able to flex and evolve with the patient’s changing condition

  10. - Where did it come from? 2015 Working group set up by RC(UK), BMA, GMC, RCN Representatives from 37 patient and clinical organisations Sponsored by Resuscitation Council UK Additional funding from RCN, Macmillan and Scottish Government for specific workstreams Public and stakeholder consultation Early usability Pilots (acute, care home, hospice, paeds) Early adopter evaluation (Acute) funded by NIHR Design input from Helix

  11. is not (just) a form its a process “We didn’t redesign a form. We redesigned a relationship” Ivor Williams – Helix centre • Designing the form to support the process • ‘Designing in’ the conversation(s) • Clarifies outcomes patients wish for and those they fear • Clarifies realistic treatment options • Summarises person-centred and realistic patient wishes for emergency care and treatment

  12. “A clinician can’t get past this section without actually having a conversation with the patient saying – what would you prefer?” Explaining this section is what starts the conversation about values-based and realistic shared-decision making

  13. Adoption in the UK. Launched for use in Feb 2017 6 early adopter sites (Warwickshire/Coventry was first) Currently 7 CCGs, 14 Acute/Foundation Trusts, 1 Community Health Service/ 1 Health Board (Forth Valley) Planned for 2019, 31 Acute Trusts & CCGs, and NHS Borders

  14. Benefit themes from Adopter Sites Improved conversations with patients & families Enables relatives to see what care and treatment their relative does/does not want Used in all specialties and all care settings Increased conversations with patients that are not at the end of their life Preferred by patients and relatives Increase in compliance with documentation Clear plan for care and treatment across all services Reduction in complaints Improved communication between primary and secondary care and more joined up working

  15. Forth Valley experience • Pilot started in September 2017 • Small test of change in 4 areas (older adult ward, mental health ward, day hospice, primary care) • Pilot preparation • ReSPECT Steering Group with Executive Sponsor • Wider education • Quality Improvement Support- Measurement Framework • Utilise existing electronic systems • Establish email address for correspondence • Use alongside DNACPR documentation where appropriate • Remove pre-existing HACP

  16. Overall Aims of ReSPECT Pilot • To test the ReSPECT process • Emergency Care Planning • Up to Date • Useful • Easily accessible • Earlier conversations • Person Centred Care • Shared decision making

  17. Forth Valley experience • Main Pilot Ward • Identification at MDT or ward round • Sticker as prompt • Conversation (initially consultants only) • Complete form, scan and email to fv-uhb.respect@nhs.net • Communicated in IDL and GP to update KiS

  18. Forth Valley experience • Naturally the process widened beyond initial pilot area • Education - App • - Drop in Sessions/Hospital/Departmental Meetings • - Staff Intranet/Email • ReSPECT nurse (1 day per week) • Challenges • staff turnover, • process evolving • keeping up to date • fast moving snowball effect • resistance to change • refine electronic process • overlap with KIS

  19. Measurement Framework • Emphasis on Qualitative Feedback • Patient/Relatives • Carers Forum • Staff • Form Analysis • Qualitative/Quantitative • Outcomes • KIS updated within 1 month discharge • Time at home • Place of death

  20. Forth Valley experience

  21. Forth Valley experience

  22. Forth Valley experience

  23. Forth Valley experience

  24. Forth Valley experience • 100% involved in discussions • Improved communication in IDL needed • KiS not always updated (70% at 1 month)

  25. Qualitative feedback: ReSPECT experience

  26. Patient/Relative experience

  27. “Dad has always been clear regarding his end of life plans and the fact that medical professionals now have a document to show this is ideal” “Open, honest and informative. We were included and our views sought appropriately ” “Should be extended nationally” “Gave me a sense of control in the planning of my future care” “We liked that this is person centred”

  28. Carer engagement group feedback • Overwhelmingly positive (excellent or good) “Its a good thing...will be tremendously helpful at the end of life. It will take stress out of a situation. It gives everyone a voice and a choice” “Excellent idea provided the health professionals adhere to it” “The sliding scale is a bit vague, would like it broken up more” “Assists a necessary conversation”

  29. Staff Feedback • 94% felt that ReSPECT involved the patient and/or family in decision making • 88% felt ReSPECT would help them deliver the most appropriate care “ Helps me to know how far to escalate the person’s treatment” “ ..Most have been very receptive…..some people are not ready to talk about anticipatory care and this is respected” “It is gentler than DNACPR where the focus is on NOT doing something rather than what we can do with ReSPECT”

  30. Community Rollout2 small pilots done - patients with capacity living in their own home - patients without capacity in a care home Positives Challenges -Some issues getting in touch with carers and setting up meeting/telephone -Some carers worried about them making the decision -More difficult on phone than face to face -Quite complicated process re scanning and getting on clinical portal • -Easy to complete • -Facilitates shared decision making & person centred care • -Well received by families and patients • -Carers felt empowered • -Storage within care home was easy • -Fit in easily with other discussions such as acp/ dnacpr/awi

  31. Early Outcome Data

  32. Forth Valley experience

  33. Forth Valley experience

  34. Forth Valley experience Patient Preference Person Centred Provides a standardised approach cf. KIS Summary Stays with patient More clinicians can create plans Positive Feedback Facilitates involvement of the person and those close to them Accessible to more people to view Collaboration Outcomes Maintaining the integrity of the Process is key in project management!

  35. Currently.. • Currently being rolled out across hospital, primary care, hospice • Intranet page • Education and engagement events • Integrated in WSW and Nursing Home L.E.S • Integrated into existing electronic systems • Share good practice in other areas • Supporting good communication WE NEED YOU!!

  36. Next Steps • ReSPECT as a stand alone document • Improve electronic systems • Adapt to ‘paper light’ system • Increase project management • Promotional video

  37. Follow Our Progress @lynseyfielden1

  38. Patient Story • 69 year old man • Transferred from another Health Board • Parkinsonian Bulbar dysfunction Vertical Gaze Palsy Falls

  39. Progressive Supranuclear palsy • Neurodegenerative disorder ‘Parkinson’s Plus’ • Tauopathy • Marked Bulbar Dysfunction • Falls • Vertical gaze palsy • Doesn’t respond well to usual treatment • Cognition usually intact

  40. Hospital admission • The first encounter is as an acute admission • Awaiting OP clinic • Aspiration pneumonia • Bulbar dysfunction • Communication challenging

  41. How do we embark on ACP? • Appropriate for ACP? • Timing? • Who do we need to involve

  42. Prepare • Clarify the persons capacity (remember it is decision-specific) • What is important to them? What would matter in an emergency? • “What outcomes would you value/ What outcomes would you fear?” • Who is important to them? • What other clinical information is required? • Consider from a clinicians perspective what would be important to discuss • What tools are you going to use to support this? • Are there any religious or cultural beliefs to consider?

  43. Context Clinical Context Fiercely independent Prioritises life over any discomfort Humour important to him Recent move to a care home- less trust from family in care Wife and daughters strong advocates (PoA) • Weight loss • SLT involved • Felt to have capacity • Involve nutrition team • Practically easy to insert PEG but withdrawal…..

  44. What happens next • Conversation • Shared decision making/ ACP completed • PEG tube inserted • Delirium post-procedure • Discharged to care home • Attending Strathcarron Day Hospice

  45. Natural progression Further complexity Natural Course Transferred to hospice Challenging Suctioning Agitation The previous plan is changed with PoA- consider no further antibiotics even oral Discharged back to care home Comfort and dignity a priority • Readmissions • Related to bulbar dysfunction • Deteriorating capacity • Honest and Sensitive Conversations

  46. Key Points to record Capture ‘what’s important to you’ Capture ‘who is important to you’ Previous preferences if incapacity Capture how decision was made - patient preference? Consider likeliest cause of deterioration/anticipated emergency Include hospital admission preference e.g. if care home resident Include important exceptions even where palliative e.g. Fracture May become more specific towards the end of life Preferred place of death if end of life Version and location Lead clinician sign off In parallel with any palliative care review, CGA, wider ACP etc

  47. Q&A When I know CPR won’t work for a patient how can I say I am giving them a choice? Don’t start with CPR - find out what really matters to them “I want to live as long as possible – I’m not ready to die, don’t talk to me about dying!” “Supporting you to live as long as possible in the way that matters to you is exactly what we are talking about” We will do everything we can to keep you alive – what do you mean by ‘living’ – heart beating? Able to talk to family? Able to be independent? Is there a type of ’living’ that you fear? In a crisis these would be the treatments that might help…… These would be the treatments that would not get you what you want and might risk what you fear….

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