Communication tools to support advance care planning and hospital care during the Covid-19 pandemic : a design process

Article

PALADINO, Joanna | MITCHELL, Suzanne | MOHTA, Namita | LAKIN, Joshua R. | DOWNEY, Nora | FROMME, Erik K. | GULLO, Sue | BENJAMIN, Evan | SANDERS, Justin J.

The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the medical and social vulnerability of an unprecedented number of people. Consequently, there has never been a more important time for clinicians to engage patients in advance care planning (ACP) discussions about their goals, values, and preferences in the event of critical illness. An evidence-based communication tool—the Serious Illness Conversation Guide—was adapted to address COVID-related ACP challenges using a user-centered design process: convening relevant experts to propose initial guide adaptations; soliciting feedback from key clinical stakeholders from multiple disciplines and geographic regions; and iteratively testing language with patient actors. With feedback focused on sharing risk about COVID-19–related critical illness, recommendations for treatment decisions, and use of person-centered language, the team also developed conversation guides for inpatient and outpatient use. These tools consist of open-ended questions to elicit perception of risk, goals, and care preferences in the event of critical illness, and language to convey prognostic uncertainty. To support use of these tools, publicly available implementation materials were also developed for clinicians to effectively engage high-risk patients and overcome challenges related to the changed communication context, including video demonstrations, telehealth communication tips, and step-by-step approaches to identifying high-risk patients and documenting conversation findings in the electronic health record. Well-designed communication tools and implementation strategies can equip clinicians to foster connection with patients and promote shared decision making. Although not an antidote to this crisis, such high-quality ACP may be one of the most powerful tools we have to prevent or ameliorate suffering due to COVID-19.

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1553725020302750

Voir la revue «The joint commission journal on quality and patient safety, 47»

Autres numéros de la revue «The joint commission journal on quality and patient safety»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Communication tools to support advance care p...

Article indépendant | PALADINO, Joanna | The joint commission journal on quality and patient safety | n°2 | vol.47

The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the medical and social vulnerability of an unprecedented number of people. Consequently, there has never been a more important time for clinicians to engage patients in advance care planning (ACP)...

Communication tools to support advance care p...

Article indépendant | PALADINO, Joanna | The joint commission journal on quality and patient safety | n°2 | vol.47

The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the medical and social vulnerability of an unprecedented number of people. Consequently, there has never been a more important time for clinicians to engage patients in advance care planning (ACP)...

Implementing the serious illness care program...

Article | SANDERS, Justin J. | JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT

CONTEXT: Interventions to improve the quality of care for people affected by serious illness commonly fail to reach patients from marginalized and underserved communities, which include those characterized by racialized or indigen...

De la même série

Communication tools to support advance care p...

Article | PALADINO, Joanna | The joint commission journal on quality and patient safety | n°2 | vol.47

The COVID-19 pandemic has exposed the medical and social vulnerability of an unprecedented number of people. Consequently, there has never been a more important time for clinicians to engage patients in advance care planning (ACP)...

Providing palliative care to patients through...

Article | SHEPARD, Eric N. | The joint commission journal on quality and patient safety

Background: Access to palliative care clinicians is a limited resource. Expanding the reach of existing palliative care expertise by utilizing virtual care is one strategy to reach areas that lack access. We delivered virtual serv...

Chargement des enrichissements...