Top Banner
End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel
29

End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Dec 24, 2015

Download

Documents

Charla Grant
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

End-of-Life Choices

Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel

Page 2: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Quick Survey

Who has lost a loved one?

Who has an advanced directive or a living will?

Who knows that California is not a state that allows for physician assisted death?

Page 3: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Advance Directives

Page 4: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Definition & Purpose

❏ Are the legal right to express your wishes in situations when you are unable to make decisions.

❏ Ensure your quality of life and avoid having your family guess what your wishes might be in times of emotional turmoil.

Page 5: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Food for Thought

Do you know now what might be important to you later?

Are there specific medical treatments that you would want or not want?

Have you considered what environmental setting you might feel most comfortable in, such as your own home, a nursing home, or a hospital?

Page 6: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Physician Orders for Life-Sustaining

Treatment (POLST)

Page 7: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Purpose

❏ Offer more control for seriously-ill patients during their end-of-life care.

❏ Prevent unwanted or ineffective treatments.

❏ Reduce patient and family suffering (honor the patient’s wishes).

Page 8: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Living Wills

Page 9: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Definition & Purpose

❏ Written legal document.

❏ Details specific medical treatments you would or would not want implemented to keep you alive.

Page 10: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Topics Addressed

❏ Resuscitation❏ Mechanical Ventilation❏ Pain Management❏ Tube Feeding❏ Dialysis❏ Comfort Care/Palliative Care❏ Organ Donation

Page 11: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Food for Thought

Would you want to receive treatment to extend your life in any situation?

Would you want to receive treatment only if a cure was possible?

Page 12: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Do Not Resuscitate (DNR)

Page 13: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Definition & Purpose❏ An order written in a patient's medical chart (or

stated in an Advance Directive) that explicitly states that CPR, intubation, pounding, and defibrillation, should not be initiated if a patient is found in cardiac arrest.

❏ An end-of-life decision that anyone of legal age can make at any point in their life.

❏ DNR does not mean that care has stopped. There is simply a change in the goal of treatment.

Page 14: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Allow Natural Death (AND)

Page 15: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Definition & Purpose

❏ An AND order is meant to ensure that only comfort measures are provided.

❏ By using AND, physicians and other medical professionals would acknowledge that the person is dying and that everything that is being done for the patient - including the withdrawal of nutrition and hydration - will allow the dying process to occur as comfortably as possible.

Page 16: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

DNR vs AND❏ Terminally ill DNR patients might be put on a

ventilator, given artificial hydration, or have a feeding tube inserted.

❏ Whereas a terminally ill AND patient would have all of those things withdrawn, discontinued, or not even started, since such treatments would be painful and burdensome for the patient.

❏ Having an AND order would prevent this unintentional pain and simply Allow a Natural Death instead.

Page 17: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Palliative Care

Page 18: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Definition & Purpose

❏ Comfort (non-curative) care provided to the dying or to terminally ill people with an incurable disease.

❏ Is intended to improve the quality of remaining life by:❏ Relieving pain and other distressing

symptoms such as nausea, incontinence, etc.❏ Addressing the physical, emotional, social

and spiritual needs of the patient and their family.

Page 19: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Collaborative Care

❏ Partnership of patients, specialists, and family.

❏ Doctor, nurse, social work palliative care specialist, pharmacist, nutritionist, massage therapist, chaplain, and others:❏ Provide patient and family support.❏ Assist in explaining treatment options and

goals.

Page 20: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Kay’s Story

Kay has primary pulmonary hypertension, a rare condition of the blood vessels in her lungs. There are no treatments that can cure her illness, and she needs multiple medicines.

She is admitted to the hospital almost every month because she has a hard time breathing. Episodes can be brought on by a mere cold or changes in the weather. During these hospitalizations she receives extra doses of medication, but it takes a few days for her to feel better.

Each time she is hospitalized, the palliative care team works with her heart and lung doctors to treat her breathlessness. The medications they prescribe allow Kay to feel calm and comfortable.

With the team’s help, Kay filled out an advance directive to make sure her doctors know she would never want to be on a ventilator. This does not change Kay’s treatment when she is admitted. But now the doctors understand what she would want if she were too sick to breathe on her own.

getpalliativecare.org/stories

Page 21: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Hospice Care

Page 22: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Definition & Purpose

❏ Hospice care is a type of medical care provided to patients with terminal illnesses who generally have less than six months to live.

❏ It is characterized as a philosophy of care during the "end-of-life" and provides care 24 hours, seven days a week.

Page 23: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Considerations

❏ Hospice can be in the home, the hospital or in a skilled nursing facility.

❏ Think about what work best for you and your family.

Page 24: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Summary &

Additional Resources

Page 25: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Five Stages of Grief❏ Is a series of emotional stages experienced when

faced with impending death or the death of someone (or something) else.

❏ Normal coping process that affects anyone at any age.

❏ Denial❏ Anger❏ Bargaining❏ Depression❏ Acceptance

Page 26: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.
Page 27: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Death Over Dinner

❏ Who's Coming to Dinner?

❏ Set Your Intention.

❏ Select a short piece for you and your guests to watch, listen to, and read.

❏ Activate your dinner!

Page 28: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Additional Resources❏ Advance Health Care Directive Form Instructions: ag.ca.gov/consumers/pdf/

AHCDS1.pdf

❏ American Association of Retired People (AARP): www.aarp.org❏ American Bar Association: http://www.americanbar.org/aba.html❏ California Coalition for Compassionate Care: http://coalitionccc.org/❏ Center for Practical Bioethics: http://www.practicalbioethics.org/❏ Dinner Over Death: deathoverdinner.org❏ DNR versus AND: www.hospicepatients.org/and.html ❏ Five Stages of Grief: psychcentral.com/lib/the-5-stages-of-loss-and-grief ❏ Hospice and Palliative Care: www.calhospice.org❏ Living Will forms: www.uslegalforms.com/livingwills ❏ POLST California: www.capolst.org/polst-for-patients-loved-ones/❏ POLST Forms (different languages available):

www.capolst.org/polst-for-healthcare-providers/forms/❏ The Conversation Project: http://theconversationproject.org/

Page 29: End-of-Life Choices Natalie Beal, Lisa Cabrera, Katrina Leong, Charity Smith, Stephanie Wizel.

Questions?