HealthPartners Targeted Approach for Advance Directives Honoring Choices Conference July 18, 2013 Christine Sylvester, Care Delivery Supervisor Kate Kellett, Regional Clinic Director
Dec 31, 2015
HealthPartners Targeted Approach for Advance Directives
Honoring Choices ConferenceJuly 18, 2013
Christine Sylvester, Care Delivery SupervisorKate Kellett, Regional Clinic Director
• Advance care planning is a spectrum of decisions.
based on patient preference and disease complexity.
• This work is part of HealthPartners enterprise-wide
end of life care improvement activity.
Honoring Choices
Targeted
Honoring Choices
Targeted Simple
- Targeted > 65- Mild chronic
conditions
Simple
Self Directed Educate
Well Mild/ Disease Multiple/Complex Severe/Complex
Advance Care PlanningTarget Appropriate Patients
Background• Why was the advance directive short form created?
– HealthPartners committed to deploying Honoring Choices approach.
– Deployment to primary care was not successful (no targeting).
– Patients often not open to a facilitated intense advance care planning conversation.
• Form “too long”• Patients wanted simpler document for first interaction
– HP needed a SYSTEM WIDE approach for ALL 26 clinics. – The completion/return rate of Honoring Choices form was
low when piloted.– Based on the patient’s preference, the clinic will offer
either the one-page document or the Honoring Choices document.
Honoring Choices Form/Process TARGETING METHODOLOGY
•Multiple severe chronic disease•Specialty focus
– Cardiology (CHF) – Nephrology ( Kidney Failure) – Oncology (Metastatic Cancer) – Pulmonary (COPD) – Neurology (Dementia, Parkinsons)
•Nursing home/Assisted living•Complex frail MSHO•Palliative Care
Elements of Form
• Name a person to designate your wishes should you be unable to communicate these decisions. A secondary agent (health care proxy) is optional in the event the primary agent is unavailable.THIS IS CRITICAL first step for many patients.
• Choose your particular wishes about efforts to revive you if needed due to no pulse/no breathing.
Elements of Form • Include other wishes if desired. May include
religious beliefs, plans for funeral arrangements, donation of organs, any strong value or belief you want known.
• Have a notary sign this. Can be done by notaries in the clinic. Can be done by other notaries (bank, etc.)
• Reception staff will give or mail copies, the form will be scanned into EPIC and documented on the problem list.
Clinic Trainings
• Nursing leaders and Nurse Practitioner provided training to every primary care clinic
• One-hour lunch and learn session with webinar option for those who could not attend in person
• Workflow reviewed every six months through bi-annual standard work training
• Well received!
Next Step
• Frail/Elderly Care model process to target complex
primary care patients to Honoring Choices process
• Continued attention to 5 key specialties for Honoring
Choices
• Further learning with our Multicultural populations
• When patients condition changes – Honoring Choices
can be instituted (re- assess decisions)
Resources
• Facilitator Hotline
• Notary Public in every clinic
• Honoring Choices & POLST form also used in primary
care, specialty and hospital
• HealthPartners Website is a resource- Forms and
Information
Questions
• For more information…– Kate Kellett, Regional Clinic Director
• [email protected]• 952.541.2614
– Christine Sylvester, Care Delivery Supervisor• [email protected]• 651.254.7516