Advance care planning for people with dementia : the role of general practitioners

Article indépendant

BALLY, Klaus W. | KRONES, Tanja | JOX, Ralf J.

General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in the timely diagnosis of dementia and also in advance care planning (ACP). They often have known patients and their families for decades and are familiar with their values and treatment preferences; they are, therefore, in a position to initiate the ACP process even before the appearance of the first symptoms of dementia and certainly following disclosure of the diagnosis. To do so, they should recognise whether patients are receptive to an ACP consultation or whether they might reject it for personal, social or cultural reasons. Under no circumstances should the patient or their family be coerced into making these provisions. In most countries, the current framework does not provide enough time and money for GPs to carry out actual ACP consultations completely on their own. There is evidence that specially trained health professionals are able to more effectively discuss treatment goals and limits of life-prolonging measures than GPs who are well acquainted with their patients. Consequently, we suggest that it will be the GPs' task to seize the right moment for starting an ACP process, to raise awareness of patients and their relatives about ACP, to test the patient's decision-making capacity and, finally, to involve appropriately trained healthcare professionals in the actual ACP consultation process. Care should be taken that these professionals delivering time-intensive ACP consultations are not only able to reflect on the patient's values but are also familiar with the course of the disease, the expected complications and the decisions that can be anticipated. The GP will ensure an active exchange with the ACP professional and should have access to the documentation drawn up in the ACP consultation process (treatment plan and advance directive including instructions for medical emergencies) as soon as possible. GPs as coordinators of healthcare provision should document appropriately all specialists involved in the care and ensure that treatment decisions are implemented in accordance with the patient's preferences for future care or the presumed will of the patient.

http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000500809

Voir la revue «Gerontology»

Autres numéros de la revue «Gerontology»

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Advance care planning for people with dementi...

Article | BALLY, Klaus W. | Gerontology

General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in the timely diagnosis of dementia and also in advance care planning (ACP). They often have known patients and their families for decades and are familiar with their values and treatmen...

Advance care planning for people with dementi...

Article indépendant | BALLY, Klaus W. | Gerontology

General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in the timely diagnosis of dementia and also in advance care planning (ACP). They often have known patients and their families for decades and are familiar with their values and treatmen...

Palliative care and grief counseling in peri-...

Article | GARTEN, Lars | Frontiers in pediatrics | vol.8

Whenever parents lose their child, it is an enormously emotionally stressful situation for the family, regardless of whether the child is a stillborn or dies later in life. The earlier this painful loss occurs, the more precious b...

De la même série

Hospital deaths of people aged 90 and over = ...

Article indépendant | FORMIGA, Francesc | Gerontology | n°3 | vol.54

Les auteurs ont évalué les circonstances en lien avec la dernière étape avant la mort de nonagénaires qui n'ont pas le cancer dans un service de soins aigus hospitalier. Les résultats ont été comparés avec ceux d'un échantillon de...

Prognostic models associated with 6-month sur...

Article indépendant | ESTEBAN-BURGOS, Ana A. | Gerontology

BACKGROUND: Health status and the needs presented by people admitted to nursing homes make it necessary to contemplate aspects such as prognosis to offer quality palliative care. OBJECTIVE: To compare the prognostic utility in nur...

Advance care planning for people with dementi...

Article indépendant | BALLY, Klaus W. | Gerontology

General practitioners (GPs) play a key role in the timely diagnosis of dementia and also in advance care planning (ACP). They often have known patients and their families for decades and are familiar with their values and treatmen...

The crucial role of nurses and social workers...

Article indépendant | RAFTERY, Chris | Gerontology

The large scale and rapid spread of the current COVID-19 pandemic has changed the way hospitals and other health services operate. Opportunities for patient-centered decision-making at the end of life are being jeopardized by a sc...

Chargement des enrichissements...