Early discussion of advance directives for patients with newly diagnosed cancer.

Authors

null

Sekwon Jang

Inova Dwight and Martha Schar Cancer Institute, Fairfax, VA

Sekwon Jang, Suvarna Sundaram, Andrea Finlay, Natalia Romanova, Laura Knopp, Chiara Pierattini, Jenny Fuentes, Emily Hidalgo, Marian Daye, Megan Kokon, Christina Gustavson, Pamela Radomsky, Josefina Buras, Jennifer DeSimone, Suraj S. Venna, John F. Deeken, Donald L. Trump

Organizations

Inova Dwight and Martha Schar Cancer Institute, Fairfax, VA, Inova Medical Group, Fairfax, VA

Research Funding

No funding sources reported

Background: Although advance care planning and the completion of advance directives (ADs) are important methods to prevent unwanted aggressive care once patients have lost their decision-making capacity, only a minority of patients have ADs at the time of cancer diagnosis. Methods: We established a new multidisciplinary outpatient clinic to provide comprehensive care to patients with newly diagnosed cancer at the Inova Dwight and Martha Schar Cancer Institute in Northern Virginia. Improvement in advance care planning was chosen as one of the first quality improvement initiatives for 2015. We started the first PDSA cycle after creating the team, establishing the problem and goal statement, and reviewing the process map. We had three measures including: 1. Inquiring whether the patient has advance directives or not at the time of scheduling their first appointment, 2. Provide written information about advance directives at the patient’s first visit, 3. Obtain advance directives by the third office visit. The goal for each measure was 90%, 90%, and 50% by the end of 2015. Results: Between May-June 2015, 65 patients were evaluable. Baseline rates were 26%, 2%, and 12%, respectively for measures 1, 2, and 3. In July 2015, we convened a staff meeting to review each staff’s role in the process of advance care planning. The new patient schedulers had training and created a telephone script to effectively communicate advance directives information with patients. The front desk staff included written information about advance care planning in the new patient information folders. Clinical staff were asked to address any questions or concerns that patients have and to encourage patients to complete the ADs by next visit. After this intervention, the rates increased to 100%, 44%, and 33%, respectively for measures 1, 2, and 3 in August and September, 2015 (n = 45). Conclusions: Early discussion about the ADs for newly diagnosed cancer patients at our outpatient clinic showed improvement in the rate of completed ADs by a third office visit.

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Abstract Details

Meeting

2016 ASCO Quality Care Symposium

Session Type

Poster Session

Session Title

Poster Session A: Practice of Quality and Cost, Value, and Policy in Quality

Track

Cost, Value, and Policy in Quality,Practice of Quality,Science of Quality

Sub Track

Learning from Projects Done in a Practice

Citation

J Clin Oncol 34, 2016 (suppl 7S; abstr 91)

DOI

10.1200/jco.2016.34.7_suppl.91

Abstract #

91

Poster Bd #

H7

Abstract Disclosures

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