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Advance care planning for cancer patients in primary care: a feasibility study
Authors:Kirsty Boyd   Bruce Mason   Marilyn Kendall   Stephen Barclay   David Chinn   Keri Thomas   Aziz Sheikh   Scott A Murray
Affiliation:Primary Palliative Care Research Group, Edinburgh;General Practice and Primary Care Research Unit and CLAHRC End of Life Care Team, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge;NHS Fife, Lynebank Hospital, Dunfermline, Fife;Standards Framework and honorary professor of end of life care, University of Birmingham;St Columba''s Hospice chair of primary palliative care, Centre for Population Health Sciences, The University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh
Abstract:

Background

Advance care planning is being promoted as a central component of end-of-life policies in many developed countries, but there is concern that professionals find its implementation challenging.

Aim

To assess the feasibility of implementing advance care planning in UK primary care.

Design of study

Mixed methods evaluation of a pilot educational intervention.

Setting

Four general practices in south-east Scotland.

Method

Interviews with 20 GPs and eight community nurses before and after a practice-based workshop; this was followed by telephone interviews with nine other GPs with a special interest in palliative care from across the UK.

Results

End-of-life care planning for patients typically starts as an urgent response to clear evidence of a short prognosis, and aims to achieve a ‘good death’. Findings suggest that there were multiple barriers to earlier planning: prognostic uncertainty; limited collaboration with secondary care; a desire to maintain hope; and resistance to any kind of ‘tick-box’ approach. Following the workshop, participants'' knowledge and skills were enhanced but there was little evidence of more proactive planning. GPs from other parts of the UK described confusion over terminology and were concerned about the difficulties of implementing inflexible, policy-driven care.

Conclusion

A clear divide was found between UK policy directives and delivery of end-of-life care in the community that educational interventions targeting primary care professionals are unlikely to address. Advance care planning has the potential to promote autonomy and shared decision making about end-of-life care, but this will require a significant shift in attitudes.
Keywords:advance care planning   cancer   palliative care   primary health care
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