Enhancing Palliative Care for GPs: Clinical audit on end-of-life care

Ed: Thank you David and Caresearch for allowing us to share this post focusing on ways to enhance primary palliative care for general practitioners.  We at Palliverse agree that dialogue around the GPs role in palliative care is timely and important.  We would welcome further contributions on this topic.

 

Banksy Dr and Heart

Banksy Hits San Fransisco (mod). Thomas Hawk via Flickr. CC BY 4.0

 

Hi everybody. I am a GP of 25 years’ experience. I deal a lot with aged care and palliative care. I recently completed a Clinical Audit on end-of-life care through Decision Assist. I wrote a short piece for Caresearch about doing the Audit for Decision Assist as I found the process of reflecting on my practice and looking at changes very worthwhile. Here is what I wrote.

It seems to me, as time goes by, that medicine becomes more and more fragmented. We don’t seem to consider our patients as a whole person anymore. Instead, our patients become disease entities, and the clinical approach is to treat the disease and to “tick the box” with their treatment. Has the asthma plan been done? Have we completed the diabetes cycle of care? What about their cardiovascular risk?
This may be a scientific approach to medicine, and don’t get me wrong: it certainly does help with managing particular diseases but there is an art to medicine as well. The art of medicine is where we engage with our patient, developing a trust and a therapeutic relationship. We celebrate their joys with them, commiserate during sad times and become an important focus in their lives. We consider our patient, not just as a physiological being, but as a human being that lives within a family and within a community. We become their doctor.
We also age with our patients, a truism that holds today as it did a century ago. And as our patients age, they die. This is inevitable. We know that. As the patient becomes aware of their decline, they come to know that as well. This, then, can be a challenging time for both the doctor and the patient. How do you help prepare a patient for their death? What do you say? What do you do? What should you focus on? Where do you turn for advice?
This is where the Decision Assist Clinical Audit is so helpful. The Audit is designed to help answer these questions, giving the doctor the tools, understanding and insight to discuss these matters with their patient. The Audit gives a framework and a timeline for engaging with the patient and their family. It combines intellectual rigour with practical advice for all stages of the patient’s decline. It is also rewarding: it allows you to engage in the art of medicine, bringing comfort for your patient.
I found completing the Audit fitted neatly within my practice. I learnt many things from it – practical ideas that I have incorporated into my daily routine. Our older patients face many challenges as they age, and this Audit helps us to preserve their dignity and maintain compassion in the face of their dying.

David Healey

Ed:  Additional educational opportunities including an accredited Active Learning Module, Case of the Month and #FOAMpal videos are also available on Caresearch

This entry was posted in #FOAMed, #FOAMPal, Clinical, Education, Ideas, Practice by cloverdoc. Bookmark the permalink.

About cloverdoc

I am a rural GP on the mid north coast of NSW. I have always had a strong interest in Aged Care and Palliative Care, and my practice reflects that. I still do all other aspects of GP work, except confinements, which I gave away some years ago. I am always keen to improve my knowledge and skills and love hearing of other people's experiences and ideas.

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