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Palliative Integration Into Ambulatory Oncology: An Advance Care Planning Quality Improvement Project

Advance care planning (ACP) is essential to ensuring that patient-centered end-of-life goals are respected if a health crisis occurs. Advanced practitioner barriers to ACP include insufficient time and limited confidence in discussions. The purpose of this quality improvement project was to increase...

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Autores principales: Lucas, Amanda Hudson, Dimmer, Amy
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Harborside Press LLC 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8163253/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34123475
http://dx.doi.org/10.6004/jadpro.2021.12.4.3
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author Lucas, Amanda Hudson
Dimmer, Amy
author_facet Lucas, Amanda Hudson
Dimmer, Amy
author_sort Lucas, Amanda Hudson
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description Advance care planning (ACP) is essential to ensuring that patient-centered end-of-life goals are respected if a health crisis occurs. Advanced practitioner barriers to ACP include insufficient time and limited confidence in discussions. The purpose of this quality improvement project was to increase advanced cancer patients’ electronic health record (EHR) documented surrogate decision maker and ACP documentation by 25% over 8 weeks. A secondary aim was to decrease patients’ decisional conflict scores (DCS) related to life-sustaining treatment preferences after a clinical nurse specialist (CNS)-led ACP session. Using the define, measure, analyze, improve, and control (DMAIC) process of quality improvement methodology, an interprofessional team led by a palliative CNS fostered practice change by (a) incorporating a patient self-administered Supportive Care and Communication Questionnaire (SCCQ) to standardize the ACP assessment, (b) creating an EHR nursing and provider documentation template, (c) offering advanced cancer patients a palliative CNS consultation for ACP review and advance directive completion, and (d) evaluating patients’ DCS through the four-item SURE tool. Of 126 participants provided with the SCCQ, 90 completed the document, resulting in a 71% return rate. Among the completed SCCQs, 37% (n = 33) requested a CNS consultation, with 76% (n = 25) returning for the ACP session. The CNS intervention yielded an average reduction of 1.4 points in SURE tool findings, a statistically significant decrease determined by a paired sample t-test. The project’s interprofessional collaboration promoted a system-wide standardized ACP process throughout ambulatory, acute, and post-hospital settings.
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spelling pubmed-81632532021-06-10 Palliative Integration Into Ambulatory Oncology: An Advance Care Planning Quality Improvement Project Lucas, Amanda Hudson Dimmer, Amy J Adv Pract Oncol Research & Scholarship Advance care planning (ACP) is essential to ensuring that patient-centered end-of-life goals are respected if a health crisis occurs. Advanced practitioner barriers to ACP include insufficient time and limited confidence in discussions. The purpose of this quality improvement project was to increase advanced cancer patients’ electronic health record (EHR) documented surrogate decision maker and ACP documentation by 25% over 8 weeks. A secondary aim was to decrease patients’ decisional conflict scores (DCS) related to life-sustaining treatment preferences after a clinical nurse specialist (CNS)-led ACP session. Using the define, measure, analyze, improve, and control (DMAIC) process of quality improvement methodology, an interprofessional team led by a palliative CNS fostered practice change by (a) incorporating a patient self-administered Supportive Care and Communication Questionnaire (SCCQ) to standardize the ACP assessment, (b) creating an EHR nursing and provider documentation template, (c) offering advanced cancer patients a palliative CNS consultation for ACP review and advance directive completion, and (d) evaluating patients’ DCS through the four-item SURE tool. Of 126 participants provided with the SCCQ, 90 completed the document, resulting in a 71% return rate. Among the completed SCCQs, 37% (n = 33) requested a CNS consultation, with 76% (n = 25) returning for the ACP session. The CNS intervention yielded an average reduction of 1.4 points in SURE tool findings, a statistically significant decrease determined by a paired sample t-test. The project’s interprofessional collaboration promoted a system-wide standardized ACP process throughout ambulatory, acute, and post-hospital settings. Harborside Press LLC 2021-05 2021-05-01 /pmc/articles/PMC8163253/ /pubmed/34123475 http://dx.doi.org/10.6004/jadpro.2021.12.4.3 Text en © 2021 Harborside™ https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/This article is distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial Non-Derivative License, which permits unrestricted non-commercial and non-derivative use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research & Scholarship
Lucas, Amanda Hudson
Dimmer, Amy
Palliative Integration Into Ambulatory Oncology: An Advance Care Planning Quality Improvement Project
title Palliative Integration Into Ambulatory Oncology: An Advance Care Planning Quality Improvement Project
title_full Palliative Integration Into Ambulatory Oncology: An Advance Care Planning Quality Improvement Project
title_fullStr Palliative Integration Into Ambulatory Oncology: An Advance Care Planning Quality Improvement Project
title_full_unstemmed Palliative Integration Into Ambulatory Oncology: An Advance Care Planning Quality Improvement Project
title_short Palliative Integration Into Ambulatory Oncology: An Advance Care Planning Quality Improvement Project
title_sort palliative integration into ambulatory oncology: an advance care planning quality improvement project
topic Research & Scholarship
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8163253/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34123475
http://dx.doi.org/10.6004/jadpro.2021.12.4.3
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