| Literature DB >> 32631459 |
Aldis H Petriceks1, Andrea Wershof Schwartz1,2,3.
Abstract
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, more patients will require palliative and end-of-life care. In order to ensure goal-concordant-care when possible, clinicians should initiate goals-of-care conversations among our most vulnerable patients and, ideally, among all patients. However, many non-palliative care clinicians face deep uncertainty in planning, conducting, and evaluating such interactions. We believe that specialists within palliative care are aptly positioned to address such uncertainties, and in this article offer a relevant update to a concise framework for clinicians to plan, conduct, and evaluate goals-of-care conversations: the GOOD framework. Once familiar with this framework, palliative care clinicians may use it to educate their non-palliative care colleagues about a timely and critical component of care, now and beyond the COVID-19 era.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19; decision-making; end-of-life care; goals of care; uncertainty
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32631459 PMCID: PMC7322160 DOI: 10.1017/S1478951520000474
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Palliat Support Care ISSN: 1478-9515
GOOD framework
| Clinician task | Potential uncertainties | Potential resources | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Goals | Determine the goals and values of the patient | Patient may not know their own goals, or may have goals which contradict one another | – Patient Priorities Care |
| Options | Determine and describe options available to patient — including details and probabilities — given their goals | Clinicians may be uncertain about clinical options; patient may have uncertainties or misconceptions but not know how to clarify | – VHA LSTDI |
| Opinions | Elicit patient preferences regarding options available; communicate clinician perspective on most conducive option; arrive at shared decision | Clinicians may struggle to provide clinical recommendation due to prognostic uncertainty | – Clinical Frailty Scale |
| Documentation | Document outcome of decision-making process; highlight reasoning behind any decisions; make note of all participants | Clinicians often write brief notes (e.g., “DNR”), which may not reflect the nuance and situational dependency of patient values | – POLST |
Adapted from the Stanford University School of Medicine End-of-Life Curriculum for Medical Teachers.
Veterans Health Affairs Life-Sustaining Treatments Decisions Initiative.
Center to Advance Palliative Care.
Portable Orders for Life-Sustaining Treatment.