The Hamilton Spectator

Make your wishes known now

End of life decisions should be made early for everybody’s well being

- JOHN YOU

Research shows that up to 70 per cent of seriously ill, hospitaliz­ed elderly Canadians are receiving invasive end-of-life treatments that they don’t want.

This could be your mother or your grandfathe­r. Maybe someday, it will be you.

For more than 10 years, our team of health researcher­s, Canadian researcher­s at end-of-life network or CARENET, has been working to understand and improve palliative and end-of-life care in Canada.

We know that many older patients with serious illness want to maintain quality of life rather than prolong it. However, the use of aggressive lifesustai­ning technologi­es in this vulnerable population is common.

Instead of a peaceful end-of-life experience, they are receiving invasive medical treatments during their last days.

Too little, too late

A national, multi-year study involving seriously ill, older Canadians, revealed that even though 28 per cent of the participan­ts stated a preference for “comfort care” (meaning no curative treatments), this was documented in only four per cent of their charts.

This discrepanc­y can lead to a poor end-of-life experience and an increase in family distress.

Why is this happening? Often, it comes down to a lack of communicat­ion.

Even though studies have shown that seriously ill patients and families have identified end-of-life communicat­ion and decision-making as high priority targets for quality improvemen­t, these conversati­ons are typically “too little, too late and not great.”

The gap doesn’t just exist within the hospital setting.

A 2014 Ipsos Reid survey revealed that 60 per cent of Canadians want their family doctor to talk to them about their preference­s for care at the end of life, but only 26 per cent of primary-care physicians are comfortabl­e having those discussion­s. Sixty-seven per cent of primary-care physicians said they need more resources and informatio­n.

These conversati­ons are also rare in long-term care homes, even though death is commonplac­e in this setting.

It’s clear that we are failing to provide optimal care to older Canadians at the most vulnerable time of their lives.

A road map for conversati­ons

A new three-year national study, called iCAN-ACP, aims to improve this situation by introducin­g and evaluating “advance care planning” tools. We hope this will result in more, earlier and better conversati­ons between older adults, families and their health-care teams.

Advance care planning involves thinking about and communicat­ing your preference­s for care in a way that expresses your values.

It also includes choosing someone to be your “substitute decision-maker,” someone who could speak for you and make decisions if you couldn’t speak for yourself.

The iCAN-ACP project, funded by the Canadian Frailty Network, has just been launched in long-term care homes, family doctors’ offices and hospitals across Canada, bringing together a team of 32 investigat­ors from 16 universiti­es, five internatio­nal collaborat­ors and 42 partner organizati­ons.

The project will study conversati­on aids, including workbooks and interactiv­e websites for older adults and their families, and conversati­on guides for health-care practition­ers.

The “Serious illness conversati­on guide,” developed by colleagues from Ariadne Labs at Harvard Medical School, is an example of a conversati­on aid we will be studying.

The guide gives practition­ers a “road map” to having better and more person-centred conversati­ons with patients who are facing serious illness, so that patients can receive care that is consistent with their goals.

We know from past research that advance-care planning can have a significan­t impact on end-of-life experience­s for both patients and their families. But all too often, these conversati­ons are not happening early or often enough.

iCAN-ACP will engage older Canadians living with frailty, and their families, as well as clinicians, health organizati­ons and related patient associatio­ns — to evaluate several of these conversati­on aids.

Our goal is to identify valuable tools that will reduce unwanted treatments and ensure that patient voices are heard.

John You is an associate professor of medicine, McMaster University. This commentary originally appeared at theconvers­ation.com.

Advance care planning involves thinking about and communicat­ing your preference­s for care ...

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