Showing posts with label Advance Care Planning. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Advance Care Planning. Show all posts

Thursday, August 15, 2013

POLST Captures End-of-Life Care Choices

By Tracy Christner
Project GRACE executive director



Tracy Christner
Very few of us want a state-of-the-art death. You know the kind – with high-tech, aggressive interventions, such as breathing machines and feeding tubes. These devices may keep you alive technically for weeks, months or even years. However, in some circumstances, such as a heart attack, many of us would want CPR. That's where the Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment (POLST) program comes in.

POLST is designed to help individuals in the last stages of life express their wishes regarding life-sustaining treatment. Suncoast Hospice will be the first hospice in Florida to offer POLST to its patients. The pilot will begin this fall after staff has been trained by Project GRACE, the Suncoast Hospice affiliate leading this effort.

Why POLST Is Needed

Just imagine an elderly man (Mr. M) with advanced dementia living in a nursing home.  His living will requests no CPR and no intensive care. He chose his daughter as his healthcare decision maker.

One Friday evening, Mr. M is found unresponsive with an irregular, weak pulse and extremely low blood pressure. The nursing home is unable to reach his daughter and emergency services are called. The paramedics arrive and Mr. M is resuscitated, intubated and transferred to the local hospital. His daughter learns what has happened and demands to know why his living will was not followed.

Completing a living will is often not enough to ensure that your wishes to have or limit medical treatment will be respected. Living wills are general statements of your preferences but need to be carried out through specific medical orders when the need arises. Without special arrangements, medical orders have limited authority outside of the institutions in which they are written. For example, a physician’s orders at the nursing home usually have no authority in the ambulance or hospital.

Mr. M needed a document with medical orders that were followed at each step of his care, from the nursing home to ambulance to emergency department to intensive care unit. That is what POLST does.

How POLST Works

POLST is an approach to end-of-life planning based on thoughtful, facilitated conversations between patients, loved ones and medical providers. It’s designed to ensure that seriously ill patients can choose the treatments they do and do not want based on their values, personal beliefs and current states of health.

POLST’s several advantages include:

• It’s signed by the healthcare provider. There’s no need for interpretation and translation because it’s an immediately actionable medical order.

• It’s easy to follow because it’s on a single-page, standardized form.

• Unlike DNR (do-not-resuscitate) orders, it addresses not just CPR but an entire range of life-sustaining interventions, such as IV fluids, antibiotics, feeding tubes and artificial breathing.

• It’s transportable. It remains in the patient’s chart and travels with the patient. It’s recognized and honored across all treatment settings.

POLST Provides Peace of Mind

We believe POLST to be the best tool to help our patients and their families achieve peace of mind through shared and informed medical decision making.

Just imagine if Mr. M and his physician had completed a POLST form with orders indicating “Do Not Attempt Resuscitation, Comfort Measures Only and Do Not Transfer to Hospital for Life-Sustaining Treatment.” The covering physician and daughter, who agree with the POLST orders, are called. The daughter understands that her father would be transferred to the hospital if his comfort needs cannot be met at the nursing home. The next morning, Mr. M dies in comfort at the nursing home surrounded by his daughter, other family members and the staff who know him well.

For more information on POLST or Project GRACE, visit www.projectgrace.org/POLST or call (727) 536-7364. You may also read more about POLST in Suncoast Hospice’s recent article in Tampa Bay Medical News.

Tuesday, April 16, 2013

Make Your Healthcare Wishes Known: An Advance Care Planning Q&A

   
Project GRACE 
Exec. Dir. Tracy Christner
Suncoast Hospice and our affiliate Project GRACE join in recognizing National Healthcare Decisions Day on April 16. This day is an important reminder to us all to communicate and document the medical care we would want or not want if we could no longer speak for ourselves because of a life-limiting illness or injury.

Project GRACE’s staff and trained facilitators are available throughout Tampa Bay to assist with advance care planning. Tracy Christner, Project GRACE executive director, encourages everyone to discuss and plan their healthcare wishes with their families and healthcare providers so their wishes may be honored.


Here Tracy answers a few frequently asked questions about advance care planning and Project GRACE’s services:

Q: What is advance care planning and how long does the process take?

A: Advance care planning is a thoughtful process of planning for future medical care. It involves education, reflection, communication and documentation. The process is different for each individual and how long it takes depends on your specific situation. Some individuals may be able to sit down with their loved ones and begin a dialogue and others may need some guidance. Studies show that families who engage in the advance care planning process have less stress, confusion and guilt about their decisions.

Project GRACE can provide tools and educational resources to guide individuals through the process. We also have more than 100 trained facilitators in Pinellas and Hillsborough counties to help families facilitate these important conversations. The Project GRACE website, www.projectgrace.org, is a good place to start for current information, news articles and easy-to-download living wills in English and Spanish.

Q: What are advance directives?

A: Advance care planning terminology can vary from state to state and among various healthcare organizations. In the state of Florida, an advance directive is defined as a written or oral statement that allows you to convey your decisions about end-of-life care ahead of time. Many documents are considered advance directives: for example, living wills, designation of healthcare surrogate, medical durable power of attorney and organ/tissue donation.

The most important advance directive is the designation of healthcare surrogate. This document allows you to name another person to make medical decisions for you if you are unable to make them yourself. You want to be sure your healthcare surrogate is easily accessible and a person who you can count on to honor and communicate your personal wishes even if they do not agree with them. Most people choose a relative or friend who knows them best.

Q: What are some ways to bring up the subject of advance care planning with family members or friends?

A: Open and honest conversation with family and friends about your values, spiritual beliefs and hopes and fears about the final stages of your life are the best way to begin. Some conversation starters include newspaper and magazine articles, movies, the recent death of a loved one or well-known person, sermons, television shows or recent medical check-ups.

Have you made your healthcare wishes known? Contact Project GRACE at 727-536-7364 to help you get started.