Achievements and challenges during the development of an advance care planning program
Resource type
Authors/contributors
- Goodwin, Jane (Author)
- Shand, Brett (Author)
- Wiseman, Rachel (Author)
- Brough, Natalie (Author)
- McGeoch, Graham (Author)
- Hamilton, Greg (Author)
- Grundy, Kate (Author)
Title
Achievements and challenges during the development of an advance care planning program
Abstract
A nationwide program to promote preparation of advance care plans (AC Plans) was introduced in Canterbury, New Zealand, in 2013. The program was developed by local facilitators who provided support and organised education seminars and an accredited training program for health-care professionals. Information and templates for an AC Plan were available to these professionals and the community on local health-care websites and secure online systems designed to allow plans to be viewed across all health-care sectors. The number of AC Plans prepared has increased steadily, although people in minority ethnic populations or in the most deprived socioeconomic quintile are less likely to have a plan. While nurses have become the predominant group guiding people through the process of preparing an AC Plan, the involvement of staff in residential care homes has remained low. Local audit showed that 82% of people with an AC Plan died in a community setting, frequently their preferred place of death.
Publication
Australasian Journal on Ageing
Volume
n/a
Issue
n/a
Date
April 2021
Language
en
DOI
10.1111/ajag.12945
ISSN
1741-6612
Accessed
2021-06-28T02:34:31Z
Library Catalog
Wiley Online Library
Rights
© 2021 AJA Inc.
Extra
Citation
Goodwin, J., Shand, B., Wiseman, R., Brough, N., McGeoch, G., Hamilton, G., & Grundy, K. (2021). Achievements and challenges during the development of an advance care planning program. Australasian Journal on Ageing, n/a(n/a). https://doi.org/10.1111/ajag.12945
Topic
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