Top Banner
NRC•PAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine
22

NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

Jan 03, 2016

Download

Documents

Buddy Tyler
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: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care

Christine M. Wilder, M.D.Department of Psychiatry

Duke University School of Medicine

Page 2: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Why Use Advance Directives for Mental Health Care?

• Enhance autonomy and self-directed mental health care

• Provide ER and inpatient doctors with transportable documentation of a patient’s treatment preferences and history Medical disorders, emergency contact

information, side effects of medication

• Improve therapeutic alliance and treatment adherence

Page 3: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

AD Completion Rates by Study Group

Baseline 2 months Control Group (n=230)

1 (0.5%) 8 (3%)

F-PAD Group (n=239)

3 (1%) 149 (62%)

After Swanson et al 2006, Am J Psychiatry 163:1943-51

Page 4: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

“I do not consent to the administration of the following medications . . . [lists 9 meds]”

Excerpts from Unfacilitated AD:

“. . . Episodes are to be managed at home where my special foods are prepared by me or health care aide as no hospital can afford my expensive diet. . .”“. . . DO NOT NOTIFY my son ________ or his family, as they are hostile relatives.”

“I do not consent to being admitted to. . .[lists 4 hospitals] where abusive treatment has occurred . . .I would want a legal aid attorney to see me ASAP.”

Page 5: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Facilitated AD from Same Participant

Page 6: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

AD Content: Medications• 94% gave advance consent to

treatment with at least one psychotropic medication (mean = 2.4)

• 77% refused at least one psychotropic medication (mean= 1.5)

• No participant refused all medications• On average, participants gave advance

consent to twice as many medications as they refused

Page 7: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Sample Medication Choices

“I refuse Haldol because it makes me stiff, I get blurred vision, and feel like a zombie.”

“I don’t want Depakote because one time I had it and I got Pancreatitis.”

“They’ve given me Ativan before but I absolutely do not want any medications I could become addicted to.”

Page 8: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

AD Content: Hospitals

• 88% gave advance consent to hospitalization in at least one specified facility

• 62% documented advance refusals of admission to particular hospitals

• 51% gave reasons for refusal

Page 9: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Sample Hospital Comments

“I want to go to [hospital X] because it is closest to my parents and they treat me well there.”

“I do not wish to go back to [hospital Y], I was thrown in a dark room and am scared and was hurt by another patient last time.”

Page 10: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

AD Content: Emergency Contacts

• Includes family, friends, doctors and counselors that participant would want to have contacted in the event of crisis

• Provides prior consent for communication between inpatient and outpatient treatment providers

• On average, participants listed 3 emergency contacts

Page 11: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Facilitator Role

• Providing information and education about ADs, including their limitations

• Helping consumers identify appropriate agents to act in their stead during a period of incapacity

• Eliciting preferences and advance consent or refusal for psychotropic medications, hospital treatment, or ECT

Page 12: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Facilitator Role

• Gathering information about crisis symptoms, relapse and protective factors, instructions for inpatient staff, and other relevant information the consumer thinks is important

• Providing assistance for filing ADs at local health care facilities and storing them in the U.S. Living Will Registry

Page 13: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Beginning a Facilitation

• Orient the consumer to the purpose of your meeting

• Explain what an AD is and why s/he might want one

• Review the limitations of an AD

• Determine if the consumer would like to complete an AD

Page 14: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Identifying an Agent

• Clarify what an agent is and why the consumer might want one

• Determine if the consumer wants to identify an agent

• Elicit the consumer’s preferred agents

Page 15: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Demonstration and Small Group Practice: Identifying an Agent

Page 16: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Eliciting Preferences

• You are acting as a facilitator, not a provider

• Consumer has ultimate control over his/her AD

• It is appropriate to test feasibility with consumer, clarify consumer statements, and explore reasons for preferences

Page 17: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Challenges in Eliciting Preferences

• Consumers who have trouble expressing preferences

• Consumers who have too many preferences

• Consumers who have unrealistic preferences

• Conflict between clinical and facilitator role: when you know too much

Page 18: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Demonstration and Small Group Practice: Eliciting Preferences

Page 19: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Overcoming Logistical Barriers to Completing ADs

• If consumer wants to sign the “Ulysses clause,” a co-signature from a psychiatrist or clinical psychologist is required

• ADs need to be witnessed by two adults; the facilitator can act as one witness

Page 20: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Ensuring ADs Are Read by Providers and Family

• Make copies of AD and send to relevant outpatient and inpatient facilities

• Encourage consumer to discuss AD preferences with health care agents, clinicians, and other family members

• Consumers should keep a copy of their ADs with them at all times

Page 21: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

Conclusion

• ADs can help empower consumers with mental illness when they experience crises

• AD facilitation is most helpful when: 1. consumers are educated about how these

legal documents work, and

2. efforts are made by the facilitator to both honor consumers’ preferences and assist in writing a feasible AD

Page 22: NRCPAD Facilitating Advance Directives for Mental Health Care Christine M. Wilder, M.D. Department of Psychiatry Duke University School of Medicine.

NRC•PAD

National Resource Center on Psychiatric Advance Directives http://www.nrc-pad.org