Understanding of advance care planning in primary care: a gap analysis

Author:

Chow JosephineORCID,Harley Ann,Chroinin Danielle Ni,Kohler Friedbert,Harlum Janeane,Jobburn Kim,Keech Pamela,Williams Rachael,Fraser Susan,Hillman Ken

Abstract

Background Although primary care is a well suited context for conducting advance care planning (ACP), there are many barriers to initiating discussions regarding future health preference and end-of-life conversations. Methods This qualitative study conducted 30 detailed individual interviews with senior administrators, medical and nurse practitioners of a local health district, NSW Ambulance, e-Health NSW, general practitioners and practice nurses to find out about barriers to ACP in South Western Sydney. Results Thematic analysis was conducted on the interviews. Six major themes were identified: Prevalence; Empowerment of roles and responsibilities; Lack of training/knowledge/confidence; Fragmentation of care; Patient/family readiness; and Prognostication. Half of the participants were willing to use a prognostic tool to identify when a patient was likely to be at the end of their life and provide a prompt to initiate ACP. Conclusion In addition to addressing training and acknowledging resource constraints, these findings suggest that if a prognostic tool was validated and practical in a primary care setting, it may provide valuable assistance to encourage everyone in society to begin discussing this issue and completing ACP.

Publisher

CSIRO Publishing

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Health Policy

Reference27 articles.

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3. Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS) (2015) Cause of Death, Australia. Cat. no. 3303.0. (ABS: Canberra, ACT, Australia) Available at [Accessed 8 March 2021]

4. Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (2020) Burden of disease. Available at [Accessed 4 March 2021]

5. Advance care planning for cancer patients in primary care: a feasibility study.;British Journal of General Practice,2010

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