Abstract

BackgroundThe program “Implementing Goals of Care Conversations with Veterans in VA LTC Settings” is proposed in partnership with the US Veterans Health Administration (VA) National Center for Ethics in Health Care and the Geriatrics and Extended Care Program Offices, together with the VA Office of Nursing Services. The three projects in this program are designed to support a new system-wide mandate requiring providers to conduct and systematically record conversations with veterans about their preferences for care, particularly life-sustaining treatments. These treatments include cardiac resuscitation, mechanical ventilation, and other forms of life support. However, veteran preferences for care go beyond whether or not they receive life-sustaining treatments to include issues such as whether or not they want to be hospitalized if they are acutely ill, and what kinds of comfort care they would like to receive.MethodsThree projects, all focused on improving the provision of veteran-centered care, are proposed. The projects will be conducted in Community Living Centers (VA-owned nursing homes) and VA Home-Based Primary Care programs in five regional networks in the Veterans Health Administration. In all the projects, we will use data from context and barrier and facilitator assessments to design feedback reports for staff to help them understand how well they are meeting the requirement to have conversations with veterans about their preferences and to document them appropriately. We will also use learning collaboratives—meetings in which staff teams come together and problem-solve issues they encounter in how to get veterans’ preferences expressed and documented, and acted on—to support action planning to improve performance.DiscussionWe will use data over time to track implementation success, measured as the proportions of veterans in Community Living Centers (CLCs) and Home-Based Primary Care (HBPC) who have a documented goals of care conversation soon after admission. We will work with our operational partners to spread approaches that work throughout the Veterans Health Administration.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s13012-016-0497-0) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • The program “Implementing Goals of Care Conversations with Veterans in VA LTC Settings” is proposed in partnership with the US Veterans Health Administration (VA) National Center for Ethics in Health Care and the Geriatrics and Extended Care Program Offices, together with the VA Office of Nursing Services

  • Conversations about life-sustaining treatments (LST) preferences are frequently held with veterans and their families, and documentation of care preferences in an advance directive is routine in most Veterans Health Administration (VA) settings

  • While admission to a long-term care service or setting is an appropriate trigger for Goals of care (GoC) conversations, practices vary across VA Community Living Centers (CLCs) and VA Home-Based Primary Care (HBPC) programs about how and when these conversations should be held after admission

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The program “Implementing Goals of Care Conversations with Veterans in VA LTC Settings” is proposed in partnership with the US Veterans Health Administration (VA) National Center for Ethics in Health Care and the Geriatrics and Extended Care Program Offices, together with the VA Office of Nursing Services. The three projects in this program are designed to support a new system-wide mandate requiring providers to conduct and systematically record conversations with veterans about their preferences for care, life-sustaining treatments. The VA National Center for Ethics in Health Care has updated Handbook 1004.03, “Life Sustaining Treatment Decisions: Eliciting, Documenting, and Honoring Patients’ Values, Goals, and Preferences”. Through this update, licensed prescribing practitioners throughout all care delivery settings in the VA will be required to hold GoC conversations with veterans and their families, document the findings in a standard template installed in a consistent, prominent place within the VA electronic health record, and develop care plans consistent with the goals expressed by the veterans and their families. While the focus of the conversation is on LST decisions faced by veterans with life-limiting events (such as end-stage heart failure or terminal cancer), the intent is to elicit, document, and respect veterans’ preferences for care, which is important for all veteran populations

Methods
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call