PALLIATIVE CARE

GPs’ Role at the End of Life

Key Focus Areas:

  • Person-Centred Care:
    • Support wellbeing and quality of remaining life.
    • Respect the person’s values, goals, and treatment choices.
  • Proactive Clinical Care Planning:
    • Anticipate and provide care as the person’s condition deteriorates.
    • Shift goals of care from treating illness to comfort and managing death.

Engagement with End-of-Life Issues:

  • Anticipate and plan to minimize predictable problems.
  • Improve care and quality of life for patients and carers.
  • Ensure high-quality handovers for continuity of care, especially in RACFs.

Role of Rural GPs:

  • Continue providing care as patients move between home, RACFs, and rural hospitals.
  • Address lack of patient access to community nursing, specialist palliative care, and home care equipment.

Increasing Demand for GP Care at End of Life:

  • Ageing population.
  • Technological advances extending life.
  • Growing number of patients with progressive chronic diseases and disabilities.
  • Patients avoiding unwanted medical and hospital treatments.
  • Preference for palliative care at home or in RACFs.
  • Gaps in community end-of-life care services.
  • Increased patient awareness of advance care planning.

Skills Required for End-of-Life Care:

  • Systematic chronic disease management.
  • Person-centred care and communication.
  • Shared decision making and goals of care.
  • Supporting carers and family.
  • Dealing with uncertainty.
  • Anticipating likely events.
  • Clinical care planning, including crisis planning.
  • Team care participation and coordination.
  • Using tools and resources to supplement knowledge and skills.
  • Referrals and shared care with specialists and local team-based support services.
  • Use of peer support and training.

Barriers for GPs:

  • Uncertainty and lack of knowledge about prognosis, illness trajectory, and terminal phase of advanced chronic diseases (e.g., cancer, heart failure, dementia).

Importance of GP Awareness:

  • Awareness of illness trajectories allows anticipation of likely events.
  • Facilitates practical planning for end-of-life care.

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