Enhancing Junior Doctors’ Competence in Advance Care Planning: A Focused Training Initiative

Poster ID
2976
Authors' names
Dr Nusrat Hashem, Dr Shadman Sakib, Dr Eleanor Weyell , Dr Nawrin Pinky, Dr Samuel Cohen
Author's provenances
United Kingdom

Abstract

Introduction:

Advance care planning is a process that allows individuals to make decisions about their future healthcare, including end-of-life care, by discussing and documenting their preferences, values, and goals with healthcare providers and loved ones.These are especially critical for patients with serious, life-limiting conditions or for frail older adults who may face unexpected health crises.It is a commonly recognised barrier to care planning however that senior doctors often do not have the time to complete it for all patient’s who require them and that junior doctors lack confidence in having these discussions, this Quality Improvement Project aims at to increase the use of Advance care planning in the form of Emergency health care plan (EHCP) by empowering junior doctors to competently lead these discussions by introducing focused teaching on the topic to regular teaching.

Method:

Our objective was to organize teaching sessions for all junior doctors and LED doctors across University Hospitals of Leicester to educate them identifying suitable candidates and competently leading the discussion. So far we have delivered these sessions during Geriatric departmental teaching, IMT teaching and trust grade teaching and have gathered feedback to assess the teaching. We have also been collecting information on the total number of EHCPs completed by the trust over various periods, following the introduction of focused Advance Care Planning training into regular junior doctor teaching

Result:

After completing the original round of teaching, we found an overall improvement in the confidence that individuals had in both holding conversations about EHCPs and documenting the forms. 63.2% of participants now felt confident in conducting conversations, with 78.9% feeling confident to complete the EHCP form itself in the electronic system. As of now, we have not demonstrated an improvement in the number of EHCPs completed, with an initial result of 39 over the three months before teaching, compared to 36 after teaching. It was also noted that almost all EHCPs were completed in the context of advanced frailty and were not utilized for younger patients with terminal conditions.

Conclusion :

This initiative has been shown to increase junior doctors' confidence in leading ACP discussions, highlighting the need for such training to promote patient-centered care. Expanding this educational effort to include additional training for foundation-level doctors and GP trainees may further enhance advance care planning practices in hospitals. However, it is interesting to note that despite the perceived increase in confidence, the total number of completed plans does not appear to have improved. This may be partly due to our not yet targeting all relevant groups; future rounds of the project should explore the ongoing barriers to completion.

Presentation