
Capital Market Assumptions given in Appendix
January 15, 2024
Health Promotion
January 17, 2024Slide 1: Advanced care planning for a palliative patient
Slide 2: Effect of ACP
- Patient journeys are enhanced, patients are more educated, and care is more patient-centered.
- Developments in care delivery consistency and quality service.
- Patients, as well as the interdisciplinary team, will be able to communicate more effectively.
Note: Patients, respective relatives or even other judgments, and respective care providers deliberate on the child’s goals, objectives, and opinions, debate how these should affect the present and potential medical treatment, and then utilize this knowledge to show that approximately (Voss et al. 2019). Advanced medical experts ultimately work at a middle-level physician’s level. They assist current and clinical treatment to improve multi-professional groups’ capabilities. Their main responsibilities are to improve clinical consistency and provide better patient-centered treatment. They also work to ensure that patients receive safe, affordable, and better-quality care. To supplement their existing expertise, ACPs must further enhance their specialized abilities and obtain additional general inspection, diagnostic, and therapy abilities in heart, pulmonary disease, abdomen exams, and mental well-being.
Slide 3: Decision-making concerning ACP
- It has been four steps of decision-making concerning ACP.
- Provide the patient’s perspectives of illness, living well-being, end-of-life problems, and making the decision like an actual guide.
- Identifying the recent palliative care required and also recognizing the end of life.
- Using innovative scientific proof audiovisual judgment tools, build patient-centered healthcare environments.
Note: ACP is indeed a procedure that helps persons of all ages and stages of health identify and share their values, life objectives, and medical treatment choices. Examining the discussion guides showed a four-phase structure for ACP discussion: planning, initiation, investigation, and activity. The guides’ main focus was individuals’ views on disease, staying well, final issues, and judgment (Song et al. 2019). Defined and executed a certification method based on factors developed by the Patient Choice Support Guidelines Collaborative to ensure they are useful, reliable, and impartial tools to utilize in the collaborative decision-making procedure.
Slide 4: Communication planning in a palliative context
- Countertransference is something to be aware of.
- Effective listening and creative reflection are two skills that can be practiced.
- staying neutral and passive
Note: Communication about a suffering person’s diagnosis enhances final care as well as the grief experienced by those who care for them. This can assist in ensuring that the passing person’s explicit wishes are honored, as well as preventing mistakes and unneeded distress. Cognitive dissonance is something I’m interested in. Palliative care professionals’ work revolves around goal-of-care discussions. Clinicians may find discussing the goals of treatment difficult for a variety of reasons, including prognosis pessimism, fear of adversely impacting patients, and emotions of incompetence or discouragement (Voss et al.2021). These constraints are frequently found within the physician, who contributes to the first interpersonal communication shared by palliative and psychiatry: internalizing and externalizing recognition. Patients might feel at ease having good communication and an accessible position with extremities realigned. Instead of using medical terms, use simpler terms. Avoid using ambiguous terminology.
Slide 5: Thank you
Reference list
Journals
Song, M.K., Ward, S.E., Hepburn, K., Paul, S., Kim, H., Shah, R.C., Morhardt, D.J., Medders, L., Lah, J.J. and Clevenger, C.C., 2019. Can persons with dementia meaningfully participate in advance care planning discussions? A mixed-methods study of SPIRIT. Journal of palliative medicine, 22(11), pp.1410-1416.
Voss, H., Vogel, A., Wagemans, A.M.A., Francke, A.L., Metsemakers, J.F.M., Courtens, A.M. and de Veer, A.J.E., 2019. Advance care planning in the palliative phase of people with intellectual disabilities: analysis of medical files and interviews. Journal of Intellectual Disability Research, 63(10), pp.1262-1272.
Voss, H., Vogel, A.G., Wagemans, A.M., Francke, A.L., Metsemakers, J.F., Courtens, A.M. and de Veer, A.J., 2021. Development, implementation, and evaluation of an advanced care planning program for professionals in palliative care of people with intellectual disability. Intellectual and Developmental Disabilities, 59(1), pp.39-54.





