(Press-News.org) Philadelphia, November 10, 2014 -- Physician-patient communication about goals of care is a low risk, high value intervention for patients with a life threatening illness, the American College of Physicians (ACP) advises in a paper published in JAMA Internal Medicine.
"Discussions about end-of-life care, especially early in the course of a life-limiting illness, are associated with care more consistent with patient goals and improved patient outcomes, including longer survival rates and better quality of life," said Dr. David Fleming, president, ACP. "This approach is also associated with improved bereavement outcomes for family members."
Co-authored for ACP's High Value Care Task Force by Dr. Rachelle Bernacki and Dr. Susan Block from the Center for Palliative Care at Harvard Medical School, "Communication about Serious Illness Care Goals: A Review and Synthesis of Best Practices" notes that a consistent and large body of mostly observational research shows that patient, physician, and system factors all contribute to deficiencies in serious illness care communication.
The paper reviews current literature and describes best practices in conversations about serious illness care goals. The paper also offers practical advice for clinicians and health care systems about developing a systematic approach to the quality and timing of such communication to assure that each patient has a personalized serious illness care plan.
"It is important for physicians, patients, and their families to know that the evidence does not support the commonly-held belief that communication about end-of-life issues increases depression, anxiety, or loss of hope among patients," Dr. Fleming said.
Effective communication about end-of-life care may also reduce costs. Best practices in discussing goals of care include sharing prognostic information, eliciting decision-making preferences, understanding fears and goals, exploring views on tradeoffs and impaired function, and wishes for family involvement, the authors write.
ACP advises that communication about serious illness care goals should come from the patient's primary clinician even when a team of clinicians is involved with the patient's care. Key elements of a system to help assure that every patient has a personalized serious illness care plan include training clinicians, identifying patients at risk of dying, preparing and educating patients, "triggering" physicians to conduct discussions at the appropriate time, a structured communication format for goals of care discussions, a system to assure documentation of these discussions, and metrics to gauge performance.
ACP supports the need for improving the approach to serious illness and end-of-life care, as well as the system changes needed to assure thoughtful and timely communication with patients and their family members across all health care settings.
The most common clinical conditions relevant to the paper include cancer, congestive heart failure, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, and chronic kidney disease / end stage renal disease.
INFORMATION:
About ACP's High Value Care Task Force
ACP's High Value Care initiative is designed to help doctors and patients understand the benefits, harms, and costs of tests and treatment options for common clinical issues so they can pursue care together that improves health, avoids harms, and eliminates wasteful practices. ACP defines High Value Care as the delivery of services providing benefits that make their harms and costs worthwhile. ACP's High Value Care Task Force papers focus on value by evaluating the benefits, harms, and costs of a test or intervention. Value is not merely cost. Some expensive tests and treatments have high value because they provide high benefit and low harm. Conversely, some inexpensive tests or treatments have low value because they do not provide enough benefit to justify even their low costs and might even be harmful.
About the American College of Physicians
The American College of Physicians is the largest medical specialty organization and the second-largest physician group in the United States. ACP members include 141,000 internal medicine physicians (internists), related subspecialists, and medical students. Internal medicine physicians are specialists who apply scientific knowledge and clinical expertise to the diagnosis, treatment, and compassionate care of adults across the spectrum from health to complex illness.
Scientists believe a new treatment, shown to be effective in mice, could halt the growth of tumours in patients with prostate cancer.
Pioneering research, by academics at the Universities of Bristol, Nottingham and the University of the West of England (UWE Bristol), shows that a specific compound can inhibit the activity of a molecule which is key to how tumours form new blood vessels. The vessels are essential for the cancer cells to survive and multiply.
The findings, published today [10 November] in the journal Oncogene, show that targeting a molecule called SRPK1 ...
The sound of monitor alarms in hospitals can save patients' lives, but the frequency with which the monitors go off can also lead to "alarm fatigue," in which caregivers become densensitized to the ubiquitous beeping.
Researchers at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center have tackled this problem and developed a standardized, team-based approach to reducing cardiac monitor alarms. The process reduced the median number of daily cardiac alarms from 180 to 40, and increased caregiver compliance with the process from 38 percent to 95 percent.
"Cardiac monitors ...
Laundry detergent pods began appearing on U.S. store shelves in early 2010, and people have used them in growing numbers ever since. The small packets can be tossed into a washing machine without ever having to measure out a liquid or powder. The convenience, though, has come with risks for young children.
A new study from researchers at Nationwide Children's Hospital found that from 2012 through 2013, U.S. poison control centers received reports of 17,230 children younger than 6 years of age swallowing, inhaling, or otherwise being exposed to chemicals in laundry detergent ...
When bladder cancer patients are well-informed by their physicians, they acknowledge that tobacco use was likely the cause of their disease. The finding comes from a new study published early online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society. Patients with such knowledge may be more motivated to quit smoking, which could help prolong their lives.
At least half of bladder cancer cases diagnosed in the United States are the result of cigarette smoking. Bladder cancer is the second most common tobacco-related malignancy, a fact that is not well known ...
Businesses report that U.S. military veterans make excellent employees, but companies still experience challenges locating and hiring them, according to a new RAND Corporation report.
Studying a group of companies that have made a major commitment to hire veterans, researchers concluded that challenges remain for veterans seeking civilian jobs and employers hoping to hire them, including continuing difficulty understanding the match between military skills and civilian job requirements.
Too often veterans believe their talents apply only in the security or defense ...
The child-mortality gap has narrowed between the poorest and wealthiest households in a majority of more than 50 developing countries, a new study from the Stanford University School of Medicine has found.
This convergence was mostly driven by the fact that child-mortality rates declined the fastest among the poorest families. In the countries where the gap increased, the study identified a common thread: poor governance.
The findings provide important information for making decisions about prioritizing global health investments to effectively promote equity, said ...
JACKSONVILLE, Fla. -- Researchers at Mayo Clinic's campus in Jacksonville say they have identified first steps in the origin of pancreatic cancer and that their findings suggest preventive strategies to explore.
In an online issue of Cancer Discovery, the scientists described the molecular steps necessary for acinar cells in the pancreas -- the cells that release digestive enzymes -- to become precancerous lesions. Some of these lesions can then morph into cancer.
"Pancreatic cancer develops from these lesions, so if we understand how these lesions come about, we may ...
This news release is available in French.
VIDEO:
Arthritis pain in dogs can be relieved, with no side effects, by a new product based on medicinal plants and dietary supplements that was developed at the University of Montreal's...
Click here for more information.
Arthritis pain in dogs can be relieved, with no side effects, by a new product based on medicinal plants and dietary ...
A team of researchers led by Michele Fumagalli from the Extragalactic Astronomy Group and the Institute for Computational Cosmology at Durham University, were among the first to use ESO's Multi Unit Spectroscopic Explorer (MUSE) instrument on the VLT. Observing ESO 137-001 -- a spiral galaxy 200 million light-years away in the southern constellation of Triangulum Australe (The Southern Triangle) -- they were able to get the best view so far of exactly what is happening to the galaxy as it hurtles into the Norma Cluster.
MUSE gives astronomers not just a picture, but provides ...
Dublin, Ireland, November 9th 2014 - Botanists at Trinity College Dublin have launched a database with information that documents significant 'life events' for nearly 600 plant species across the globe. They clubbed together with like-minded individuals working across five different continents to compile the huge database of plant life histories, for which data have been gathered over a near 50-year span.
At a time in which climate change and increasing human populations are rapidly re-shaping plant distributions, the researchers hope their COMPADRE Plant Matrix database ...