American Journal of Kidney Diseases
Volume 49, Issue 1 , Pages 27-36, January 2007

The Creation of an Advance Care Planning Process for Patients With ESRD

  • Sara N. Davison, MD

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationAddress reprint requests to Sara N. Davison, MD, 11-107 Clinical Sciences Bldg, Edmonton, Alberta, Canada T6G 2G3.
  • ,
  • Colleen Torgunrud, BSW

University of Alberta and Northern Alberta Renal Program, Edmonton, Canada.

Received 25 July 2006; accepted 28 September 2006. published online 12 December 2006.

Comprehensive care of patients with end-stage renal disease (ESRD) requires expertise in advance care planning (ACP), including attention to ethical, psychosocial, and spiritual issues related to starting, continuing, withholding, and stopping dialysis therapy. ACP currently is under evolution from a document-driven decision-focused event. This article describes a new approach to ACP that emphasizes a relational patient-centered process that focuses on broader goals of care for a particular dialysis patient with known medical problems and is designed to serve as a guide to help nephrologists, social workers, and other health care professionals explore ACP discussions with their patients with ESRD. Specifically, we define ACP, highlight goals and key features of this facilitated ACP process, and provide an interview guide with examples of questions that can be used to explore the various aspects of ACP with patients and their families. Outcomes of such an ACP process will not be measured by increasing the number of completed advance directives, but by improving satisfaction with the entire end-of-life experience and having outcomes match patient preferences. It is expected that such a process will enhance shared decision making among patient, surrogate, and health care provider and help build strong and intimate relationships that can only serve to enhance end-of-life care. Throughout this process, patients are not abandoned as they confront the realities of declining health and functional status, but rather are supported through their illness and life on dialysis treatment.

Index Words: End-of-life care, advance care planning, end-stage renal disease (ESRD)

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 Originally published online as doi:10.1053/j.ajkd.2006.09.016 on December 1, 2006.Support: This work was funded by an unrestricted research grant to S.N.D. from Amgen Canada Inc. Potential conflicts of interest: None.

PII: S0272-6386(06)01509-5

doi:10.1053/j.ajkd.2006.09.016

American Journal of Kidney Diseases
Volume 49, Issue 1 , Pages 27-36, January 2007