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Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and Sussex Medical School
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Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Jan 03, 2016

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Page 1: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective

Professor Bobbie Farsides

Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and Sussex Medical School

Page 2: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

In global terms it is a luxury In our own society it is something we have

grown to expect, or at least realistically hope for

People are living longer, we have added years to life, but have we added life to years?

How does our culture treat elderly people? We are tomorrow’s elderly are we prepared

for this fact? Elderly people are a ‘product’ of the context

within which they age

Page 3: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Vulnerable

Dependent

Non-competent

Hospitalised

In which case we need to protect them, advocate for them, manage their care.

Page 4: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

DNAR notices

Whistle-blowing

Post –Shipman

Page 5: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Feisty

Independent

Demanding

Well informed

Page 6: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.
Page 7: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

2009 Costa Book Award (formerly the Whitbread Prize) for her autobiography Somewhere Towards the End (Granta). The judges called Athill’s book “a perfect memoir of old age – candid, detailed, charming, totally lacking in self-pity or sentimentality and above all, beautifully, beautifully written.”

Page 8: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Family

Church, Mosque, Community groups

Nursing home staff

No one

Loss – Spouse, Friends, GP

Page 9: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Demystifying death and dying

Advance decisions

Proxies

Life Value Histories

Page 10: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Final Chapter or Important transition

Spiritual experience or biological fact

Private or public event

Welcome , unexpected, tragic, appropriate

Page 11: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

If you believe in the sanctity of human life all lives are of value irrespective of their quality

If you do not hold this view you may believe that some lives are of such low quality they are not worth living.

Page 12: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Important ethical issue irrespective of age

Age specific variants e.g. ‘fair innings arguments’ QUALYs

Age neutral variants e.g. quality of life, futility, justice

Page 13: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Conservative management (renal dialysis)

Patient choice to refuse treatment(a) due to burdensomeness of treatment(b) as an end of life decision

Decisions made in the best interests of non-competent patients

Page 14: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Where do older people feature in this debate?

Where do older people feature in the evidence?

Page 15: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

A good death recognisable as such in the context of the person’s life and dying.

Page 16: Improving end of life care in older people – the ethical perspective Professor Bobbie Farsides Professor of Clinical and Biomedical Ethics Brighton and.

Individualised Respectful Dignified Timely Acceptable