Intending to fill an important gap in medical training, this book
presents an easy-to-learn, standardized approach to having
compassionate and collaborative goals of care conversations with
patients and families, a skill that can be difficult for clinicians
to learn and that is not part of standard medical education
curricula. Developed by a Palliative Care provider, this is the first
book to teach everything clinicians need to know to gently guide
patients and families through what can often be difficult discussions
about illness, disease, end-of-life wishes, and hospice care.
This technique can be used to discuss any medical diagnosis or
treatment, be employed at any age or stage of an illness, and can be
used by health care professionals at any level. Readers will be
introduced to the patterns of decline patients follow toward the
end of life, criteria for recognizing when a patient’s time is
limited, hospice care, ground rules for compassionate communication,
and a step-wise method of leading patients and families through
difficult goals of care conversations in a collaborative way. The book
includes specific questions to ask and starter language clinicians can
use for developing their own patient-friendly talking points about
disease progression, the end of life, concerns that a patient’s time
is limited, advanced directives, code status, and hospice care. An
Arc of Conversation Guide, for use when learning this technique, is
also included. While modern medicine is terrific at acute
stabilization of illness or injury, it often ignores the elephant in
the room—disease progression and death. By doing so, the healthcare
system frequently misses opportunities to align patient wishes with
the care they receive. Furthermore, physicians often avoid difficult
conversations with patients due to a lack of training or the
assumption that hospice care represents medical or personal failure.
Incorporating the material and technique taught in The Arc of
Conversation into everyday practice will enable clinicians to
acknowledge and discuss patient decline and to confidently include
hospice care as a viable option for treatment that can support patient
values, wishes, and priorities. Moving toward a continually
collaborative approach with patients—a shift away from
physician-directed care to patient-centered care—will enable
clinicians to develop treatment plans that prioritize outcomes that
matter most to patients and families, improving patient and family
experience of health care across their lives and providing patients
with the ‘soft landing’ they want at the end.
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A How-to Guide for Goals of Care Conversations
Product details
ISBN
9783031704956
Published
2025
Publisher
Springer Nature
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author