Abstract

BackgroundConversations about end-of-life care remain challenging for health care providers. The tendency to delay conversations about care options represents a barrier that impedes the ability of terminally-ill patients to participate in decision-making. Family physicians with a palliative care practice are often responsible for discussing end-of-life care preferences with patients, yet there is a paucity of research directly observing these interactions. In this study, we sought to explore how patients and family physicians initiated decision-making conversations in the context of a community hospital-based palliative care service.MethodsThis qualitative study combined discourse analysis with ethnographic methods. The field research lasted one year, and data were generated through participant observation and audio-recordings of consultations. A total of 101 consultations were observed longitudinally between 18 patients, 6 family physicians and 2 pivot nurses. Data analysis consisted in exploring the different types of discourses initiating decision-making conversations and how these discourses were affected by the organizational context in which they took place.ResultsThe organization of care had an impact on decision-making conversations. The timing and origin of referrals to palliative care shaped whether patients were still able to participate in decision-making, and the decisions that remained to be made. The type of decisions to be made also shaped how conversations were initiated. Family physicians introduced decision-making conversations about issues needing immediate attention, such as symptom management, by directly addressing or eliciting patients’ complaints. When decisions involved discussing impending death, decision-making conversations were initiated either indirectly, by prompting the patients to express their understanding of the disease and its progression, or directly, by providing a justification for broaching a difficult topic.ConclusionsDecision-making conversations and the initiation thereof were framed by the organization of care and the referral process prior to initial encounters. While symptom management was taken for granted as part of health care professionals’ expected role, engaging in decisions regarding preparation for death implicitly remained under patients’ control. This work makes important clinical contributions by exposing the rhetorical function of family physicians’ discourse when introducing palliative care decisions.

Highlights

  • Conversations about end-of-life care remain challenging for health care providers

  • The question guiding this study was the following: How do terminally-ill patients and their family physicians initiate decision-making conversations about palliative care options in a hospital-based palliative care team? Throughout our research, we aimed to examine the structure of palliative care conversations, to identify how palliative care providers and patients use different types of arguments and discourses to engage in decision-making, and how these discourses were influenced by the context of care

  • The results first address how the organization of care affected decision-making conversations, and explore the discursive practices involved in initiating different types of decisions, namely decisions about symptom management and about the patients’ future

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Summary

Introduction

Conversations about end-of-life care remain challenging for health care providers. The tendency to delay conversations about care options represents a barrier that impedes the ability of terminally-ill patients to participate in decision-making. Palliative care consists of a holistic and interdisciplinary approach to care that seeks to improve the quality of life of patients and their families when confronted with a life-threatening illness. It encompasses different types of decisions, such as treatment modalities for advanced cancer patients and symptom management for those suffering from terminal chronic illnesses [1]. The ability to initiate timely conversations about endof-life decisions is considered a fundamental skill for palliative care providers [11] For these reasons, it is important to empirically explore how conversations about sensitive decisions are introduced by experienced palliative care providers during clinical interactions

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