Fighting Fires and Battling the Clock: Advance Care Planning in Family Medicine Residency

被引:0
|
作者
Apramian, Tavis [1 ]
Virag, Olivia [2 ]
Gallagher, Erin [3 ]
Howard, Michelle [3 ]
机构
[1] Univ Toronto, Dept Family & Community Med, Div Palliat Care, Toronto, ON, Canada
[2] McMaster Univ, Dept Family Med, Hamilton, ON, Canada
[3] McMaster Univ, Dept Family Med, Div Palliat Care, Hamilton, ON, Canada
关键词
ATTITUDES; EDUCATION; QUALITY; ENGAGE;
D O I
10.22454/FamMed.2023.678786
中图分类号
R1 [预防医学、卫生学];
学科分类号
1004 ; 120402 ;
摘要
Background and Objectives: Few family physicians treating patients with lifelimiting illness report regularly initiating advance care planning (ACP) conversations about illness understanding, values, or care preferences. To better understand how family medicine training contributes to this gap in clinical care, we asked how family medicine residents learn to engage in ACP in the workplace.Methods: We coded semistructured interviews with family medicine residents (n=9), reflective memos (n=9), and autoethnographic field notes (n=37) using a constructivist-grounded theory approach. We next used the constant comparative method of grounded theory to develop two composite narratives describing participants' experiences that we then member-checked with participants. Results: We identified six core categories of social process to describe how participants were taught to engage in advance care planning. These social processes included previously unidentified barriers to ACP that were specific to their role as learners. These barriers appeared to lead to cultural avoidance of prognosis, conflation of ACP and goals of care (GOC) conversations, and deferral of difficult conversations to nonprimary care settings.Conclusions: Family medicine educators should consider developing interventions such as flexible clinic schedules, dedicated ACP time, deliberate observed practice, and structured teaching to address potential barriers identified in this exploratory research. Family medicine leaders may wish to consider directly teaching residents and preceptors about crucial differences between ACP and GOC discussions. Shifting curricular focus toward eliciting values and illness understanding during ACP could help resolve a cultural avoidance of prognosis that limits family medicine residents' attempts to engage in ACP.
引用
收藏
页码:574 / 581
页数:8
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Training on the clock: Family medicine residency directors' responses to resident duty hours reform
    Peterson, Lars E.
    Johnson, Hillary
    Pugno, Perry A.
    Bazemore, Andrew
    Phillips, Robert L., Jr.
    [J]. ACADEMIC MEDICINE, 2006, 81 (12) : 1032 - 1037
  • [32] ADVANCE CARE PLANNING: PERSPECTIVES OF PEOPLE WITH DEMENTIA AND THEIR FAMILY MEMBERS
    Coimin, Diarmuid O.
    Ferguson, Liz
    Beaumont, Cliona
    Sheridan, Sheighle
    Kyne, Lorraine
    [J]. AGE AND AGEING, 2019, 48
  • [33] The prior care planning in the family medicine training
    Dhillon, Kiran
    Jerome, Dave
    Teeluck, Rajiv
    Yu, Yan
    [J]. CANADIAN FAMILY PHYSICIAN, 2018, 64 (05) : E249 - E251
  • [34] Patients' initiation of advance care planning discussions with their family physician
    Hickey, DP
    Shriner, CJ
    Perry, SE
    [J]. FAMILY MEDICINE, 2005, 37 (08) : 536 - 536
  • [35] Integrating family medicine and pharmacy to advance primary care therapeutics
    Dolovich, L.
    Pottie, K.
    Kaczorowski, J.
    Farrell, B.
    Austin, Z.
    Rodriguez, C.
    Gaebel, K.
    Sellors, C.
    [J]. CLINICAL PHARMACOLOGY & THERAPEUTICS, 2008, 83 (06) : 913 - 917
  • [36] Advance elder care decision making: A model of family planning
    Cochran, DL
    [J]. JOURNAL OF GERONTOLOGICAL SOCIAL WORK, 1999, 32 (02) : 53 - 64
  • [37] Family-Centered Advance Care Planning for Teens With Cancer
    Lyon, Maureen E.
    Jacobs, Shana
    Briggs, Linda
    Cheng, Yao Iris
    Wang, Jichuan
    [J]. JAMA PEDIATRICS, 2013, 167 (05) : 460 - 467
  • [38] Shifting Focus in Pediatric Advance Care Planning: From Advance Directives to Family Engagement
    Siden, Harold
    Chavoshi, Negar
    [J]. JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT, 2016, 52 (03) : E1 - E3
  • [39] CARE FOR THE PATIENT AND HIS FAMILY AT THE END OF LIFE: COMPASSIONATE ADVANCE CARE PLANNING
    Perez Bret, Encarnacion
    Altisent Trota, Rogelio
    Rocafort Gil, Javier
    Jaman Mewes, Paula
    [J]. CUADERNOS DE BIOETICA, 2019, 30 (98): : 35 - 42
  • [40] Advance care planning in care homes: the experience of staff, residents, and family members
    Stone, Louisa
    Kinley, Julie
    Hockley, Jo
    [J]. INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF PALLIATIVE NURSING, 2013, 19 (11) : 550 - 557