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Ensuring medical care is consistent with patient goals

11.14.16 | Indiana University

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INDIANAPOLIS - It can be challenging to determine whether the medical care provided in a hospital or nursing home is consistent with the preferences of the patient and family as indicated in the patient's advance planning documents.

Currently nearly a quarter of hospitalized older Americans are unable to make end-of-life decisions for themselves. In the blink of an eye an individual of any age can experience a medical crisis rendering them incapable of decision-making. Advance care planning is designed to ensure receipt of the preferred medical care when the patient is unable to make decisions and is encouraged for all adults.

In a methodological report published online ahead of print in the Journal of Pain and Symptom Management , clinician-researchers from the Regenstrief Institute , Indiana University Center for Aging Research and IU School of Nursing explore these challenges, discuss related metrics and make practical recommendations for overcoming barriers to honoring patient preferences.

"What we choose to measure and how we measure drives how we set up our systems to deliver that care," said first author Regenstrief Institute and IU Center for Aging Research Investigator Kathleen Unroe, MD, MHA. "We need to focus on patient outcomes not just processes.

"This paper delves into an issue important to both patients and providers--consistency with documented care preferences. We investigated the practicality of implementation of quality metrics to measure consistency of care with advance care planning and what barriers exist to putting these metrics into practice."

The authors make five recommendations for improving consistency with patient preferences:

"Advance care planning is a process, not just a form," said co-author Alexia Torke, MD, of the Regenstrief Institute, IU Center for Aging Research and IU School of Medicine. "It is important that when a person faces serious illness and can no longer make decisions, the care they receive is consistent with the wishes they have previously expressed."

In addition to Dr. Unroe and Dr. Torke, Susan Hickman, PhD, of IU School of Nursing is a co-author of "Care Consistency with Documented Care Preferences: Methodologic Considerations for Implementing the Measuring What Matters Quality Indicator."

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Journal of Pain and Symptom Management

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APA:
Indiana University. (2016, November 14). Ensuring medical care is consistent with patient goals. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8JXGZP4L/ensuring-medical-care-is-consistent-with-patient-goals.html
MLA:
"Ensuring medical care is consistent with patient goals." Brightsurf News, Nov. 14 2016, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/8JXGZP4L/ensuring-medical-care-is-consistent-with-patient-goals.html.