Social work should be more proactive in addressing the need to plan for end-of-life. Kimberly J. Johnson, Ph.D. LCSW (corresponding author)

Similar documents
Physician aid in dying: Where do we stand?

2012 AAHPM & HPNA Annual Assembly

Increasing Access to Hospice Care for African Americans in the Carolinas: Lessons Learned from Hospice Providers. Objectives 9/9/2015

Taussig Cancer Institute Community Outreach Efforts. Kimberly Kreller RN, BSN Director Community Outreach and Research

Not skilled at all Beginning skill Moderate skill Advanced skill Expert skill

Charting the Course for the Future of Social Work in End-of-Life and Palliative Care

Advance Care Planning: Contemporary Issues and Future Directions

All Aboard. Mercedes Bern Klug PhD, MSW a, Betty J. Kramer PhD b & John F. Linder MSW, LCSW c a School of Social Work and Aging Studies Program,

Death and Dying in California

WHAT FACTORS INFLUENCE AN ANALYSIS OF HOSPITALIZATIONS AMONG DYING CANCER PATIENTS? AGGRESSIVE END-OF-LIFE CANCER CARE. Deesha Patel May 11, 2011

A Cross-Cultural Qualitative Study: The Differences in Attitudes and Opinions on Advance Care Planning Among African, Caucasian, and Latino Americans

2017 National Association of Social Workers. All Rights Reserved. 1

6/12/2018. Understanding POLST: Maine s Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment. Experience with POLST? Agenda.

Palliative Care in Aged Residential Care: How does it effect staff?

our vision our mission 7/24/18 Twin Ports Conference Session 202 Learning Objectives

Hospice Outreach Program for the Latino Community

TRUE Hospice Utilization Project Hospice Access Research References

Using Disease Trajectories to Guide Social work Practice with Chronically Ill patients and Their Caregivers. Christina Kulp, LCSW, ACHP-SW

End of Life Care in Latino Elders: It is more than a Language Barrier

ADVANCE CARE PLANNING AMONG CHINESE AMERICANS. Mei Ching Lee, RN. PhD University of Maryland Baltimore School of Nursing

Coach Caregiver: Caregiver Insights into Palliative Care

How Many Times? Result: an Unsatisfactory Outcome That Can Be Avoided

Palliative Care for Older Adults in the United States

Hospice and Palliative Care An Essential Component of the Aging Services Network

Research Article Preferences for Advance Directives in Korea

Universal Access to Palliative Care

Eastern Michigan University School of Social Work Field Evaluation: MSW Advanced Concentration Mental Illness and Chemical Dependency

Health Disparities and Community Colleges:

This research was supported by the National Center for Family & Marriage Research, which is funded by a cooperative agreement, grant number 5 UOI

End of Life Care in Nova Scotia: Surveillance Report. Dr. Fred Burge June 13, 2008

Alex Zamora, LMSW. Human Services Program Specialist 211 Idaho CareLine Idaho Department of Health and Welfare Monday, June 3, 2013

John Cagle, PhD, MSW General Assembly of the Social Work Hospice & Palliative Care Network

The concept of advance directives is

IMPLEMENTING STANDARDS FOR QUALITY PALLIATIVE CARE. Monica Malec, MD University of Chicago

Patients with Parkinson's Disease, Caregivers', & Clinicians Perspectives of Advance Care Planning for End-of-Life Care

Improving EOL Care: Understanding disparities, current barriers, and finding a way forward

Quality of Life (F309 End of Life) Interpretive Guidance Investigative Protocol

AGING & GERONTOLOGICAL SERVICES SOCIAL WORK 19:910:572 RUTGERS, THE STATE UNIVERSITY OF NEW JERSEY Spring, 2009

HEALTHSTREAM LIVING LABS IN ACTION

Strategic Plan

School of Social Work

Improving Quality of Life for Older Adults in Ontario: Issues and opportunities. Knowledge Transfer and Exchange Forum March 15, 2013 CAMH

End of Life Care Services for Persons with Intellectual Disabilities (PIDs)

CURRICULUM VITAE. July PROFESSIONAL POSITION present Assistant Professor of School of Social Work, The University of Iowa

School of Social Work

Department of Social Work Florida Gulf Coast University. Foundation Practice Field Placement Learning Plan

PALLIATIVE CARE in New Brunswick. A person-centred care and Integrated services framework

Foundation Competencies CHILD WELFARE EPAS Core

Section #3: Process of Change

Conversations of a Lifetime. Conversations of a Lifetime 4/22/2016. What is Advance Care Planning?

MINNESOTA GERONTOLOGICAL SOCIETY ANNUAL CONFERENCE 2015 Phyllis A. Greenberg, PhD Sue Humphers-Ginther, PhD Jim Tift, M.A. Missy Reichl, B.S.

Population-based strategies to enable advance care planning and improve goals of care conversations

PUBLICATIONS: PEER-REVIEWED JOURNAL ARTICLES. General Indices

Dialysis Social Worker Training and Knowledge Regarding Kidney Transplantation

POSITION PAPER PALLIATIVE CARE, PEDIATRIC PALLIATIVE CARE AND PAIN THERAPY: HUMANIZATION OF CARE

Advancing End-of-Life Care Decisions through a Comprehensive Case Management Approach: A Quality Improvement Project

St. Cloud Field Practicum Learning Contract

4/26/2012. Laura Grooms, MD Assistant Professor Geriatric Medicine Department of Family and Geriatric Medicine University of Louisville April 20, 2012

Cost effectiveness analysis of advance care planning in Australia

Consultation on Legislative Options for Assisted Dying

HealthCare Chaplaincy Network and The California State University Institute for Palliative Care and Palliative Care Chaplaincy Competencies

Abby Woods, DNP, FNP Southern Illinois Healthcare Supportive Care Program END OF LIFE ISSUES IN THE CARE OF CARDIAC PATIENTS

Queen s Family Medicine PGY3 CARE OF THE ELDERLY PROGRAM

Feasibility of Implementing Advance Directive in Hong Kong Chinese Elderly People

What You Need To Know About Palliative Care. Natalie Wu Moy, LCSW, MSPA RUHS Medical Center Hospital Social Services Director

Deprescribing. Deprescribing. Webinar #12 Webinar #1 Developing Cultural Competency. Addressing EOL Issues Jessica Visco, PharmD, CGP

Advance Care Planning

Partnering with the Community to Build Sustainability: the Detroit CNP

Holy Cross Health Meeting the Needs of the Senior Population. Judith Rogers, RNC, MSN, PhD President, Holy Cross Hospital February, 2016

End of Life Option Act: One Year. Susie Crandall Hospice East Bay. CAHSAH CHAPCA Annual Conference & Expo May 22 24, 2018, Monterey, CA

Psychosocial Assessment, Intervention and Treatment Planning. Handouts. Objectives

Language Access Services Policy and Health Care Interpreters. David Cardona, MD, MPH Language Access Services Coordinator

unathorized use not permitted

A PROGRAM TO INCREASE HEALTH LITERACY FOR OLDER LATINO ADULTS RESIDING IN LA HABRA, CALIFORNIA: A GRANT PROPOSAL

Community Health Improvement Plan

Health literacy strategies. Caring for immigrants, refugees, and migrant workers

SWHPN 2018 Call for Abstracts: Guidelines for Submitting an Abstract

DEPARTMENT OF PROFESSIONAL COUNSELING UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN OSHKOSH OSHKOSH, WI Clinical Mental Health Counseling Intern Evaluation

Just the FACTS: You can help! Join the NMDP Registry. Vital Statistics

Transformative Social Work Practice, Schott & Weiss. Test Bank

Presentation to the Joint Legislative Committee on Aging

2018 Healthy Aging Summit- Call for Abstracts

American Board of Psychiatry and Neurology, Inc. Geriatric Psychiatry Core Competencies Outline

Improving End-of-Life Care in First Nations Communities

WPCA Policy statement on defining palliative care

HIV/AIDS AND CULTURAL COMPETENCY

Making Meaningful and Financially Appropriate Decisions at the End of Life

Health Care Mitigation Grants Program Final Report

Medical Aid-in-Dying 4348 Waialae Avenue #927 Honolulu, HI phone CompassionAndChoices.org

Scholars, Educators, Leaders. Upcoming Graduates PhD in Social Work

FOUNDATION YEAR FIELD PLACEMENT EVALUATION

UPMC St. Margaret Community Health Needs Assessment Implementation Plan

END OF LIFE CONVERSATIONS The Social Worker Modeling Patient and Family Communication within the Interdisciplinary Team

Hospice May Prolong Life

Palliative Care Standards & Models

HHS Public Access Author manuscript Ann Intern Med. Author manuscript; available in PMC 2016 May 17.

Creating Your Palliative Care Team in a LTC Home: Step by Step

There Is Something More We Can Do: An Introduction to Hospice and Palliative Care

Seed Grant Guidelines

The family of community-centred approaches for health and wellbeing Jane South Public Health England & Leeds Beckett University

Transcription:

Social work should be more proactive in addressing the need to plan for end-of-life Kimberly J. Johnson, Ph.D. LCSW (corresponding author) Michin Hong, Ph.D., Megumi Inoue, Ph.D., MSW, RN, and Margaret E. Adamek, Ph.D Abstract Few people engage in planning for life s end and the prevalence of preparedness is particularly low in ethnic communities. As a profession, social work is well equipped to help increase planning for life s end and the care people wish to receive. However, the profession cannot simply defer to those in hospice and palliative care settings to address this issue. There is a need for earlier and equitable access to death preparation, and social workers can be instrumental in helping to insure equal opportunities for proactive planning for death. The ways social work may become more proactive in assisting individuals and families to prepare for the end-of-life are discussed. Key Words: End-of-life, death, dying, advance directives This is the author's manuscript of the article published in final edited form as: Johnson, K. J., Hong, M., Inoue, M., & Adamek, M. E. (2016). Social Work Should Be More Proactive in Addressing the Need to Plan for End of Life. Health & Social Work, 41 (4), 271-274. https://doi.org/10.1093/hsw/hlw021

Death is a certainty of life but one that receives little planning. Proactive planning involves advance decisions for end-of-life (EOL) care, the transfer of goods or wealth, and such practical considerations as the disposition of human remains and funeral or memorial service preferences (Bern-Klug, Ekerdt, & Wilkinson, 1999). These often call for interactions within legal, familial, and healthcare systems (Kelly, Masters, & DeViney, 2013). We assert that the profession of social work is well positioned to extend opportunities for people to plan proactively for their own death. Social workers in palliative and EOL care are responsive to the need for death preparation as evidenced by the development of professional competencies and standards of practice (Gwyther et al., 2005; Kramer, 2013). Yet there remains a need for wider attention to earlier planning for death. One estimate suggests that 27% of adults have given little to no thought to their EOL care, and while 35% have given some thought to the issue, the majority have neither documented nor discussed their preferences with others (Pew Research Center, 2013). Developing a care plan assists people to obtain the desired type of care as they near death (Detering, Hancock, Reade, & Silvester, 2010) and reduces stress for surviving family members (Bern-Klug et al., 1999). While time horizon and illness certainly play a role in determining whether planning occurs (Moorman & Inoue, 2013), evidence also points to the importance of social factors. In the U.S. people who are from minority racial and ethnic groups are less likely to have engaged in death preparation (Gerst & Burr, 2008; Kelley, Wenger, & Sarkisian, 2010). Moreover people with greater socioeconomic status have a higher rate of participation in activities such as writing wills and advance care planning than those with lower socioeconomic status (Kelly et al., 2013). These findings suggest that those with the tangible resources to navigate the systems involved with proactive planning benefit from preparation.

People who are suffering from terminal illnesses are often incapable of making decisions about their medical treatments or directing their EOL care. Research with a nationally representative sample of older Americans found that approximately 30% of decedents needed treatment decisions but were unable to make such decisions on their own (Silveira, Kim, & Langa, 2010). When the dying person cannot express what he wants for his medical treatment, he needs a surrogate decision maker, usually a family member and typically the spouse if the person is married (Carr & Khodyakov, 2007). Therefore, it is important to have EOL treatment preferences known to people who might have to make decisions. Having a formal EOL care plan helps this process (Inoue & Moorman, 2014). People may think that proactive planning for death is needed only when they become older; however, death can happen at any age. Moreover, because the completion of EOL planning involves a series of steps, including contemplation, discussion, and documentation (Sudore et al., 2008), early preparation is important not only for older people but also for younger and healthier people. In the absence of advance care planning and clear communication with others, lifesustaining interventions are normative even as they may add to the discomfort and distress of patients and their family members and may be inconsistent with patients wishes (Detering et al., 2010; Inoue & Moorman, 2014). Aggressive treatment occurs more often for minority patients, who are less likely to use hospice and are at greater risk for spending their last days in hospital (Hanchate, Kronman, Young-Xu, Ash, & Emanuel, 2009). A compression of healthcare usage occurs in proximity to death, which is associated with greater healthcare costs (Kelley et al., 2011). If death preparation remains low, expenditures are likely to rise substantially given the size and diversity of the older adult population (Harper,

2014). Whether the costs associated with medical diagnostics and treatment at the EOL is sustainable over upcoming decades remains questionable. More needs to be done to increase death preparedness and in turn reduce unwanted medical procedures while providing desired care for all. The person-in-environment perspective and professional values that guide social work practice provide a foundation to supporting individuals and families as they proactively plan for death. The NASW (2008) ethical commitment to clients' self-determination and recognition of the worth of each person, the importance of relationships, service, and integrity are crucial elements in addressing this sensitive topic. Under these principles social workers are trained to function in multiple roles in micro practice such as educator and broker (Kramer, 2013). Without such person-centered approaches individual preferences for care may be misidentified or misinterpreted as evidenced by the incongruity between expressed preferences for noninstitutionalized death and the actual death experience of millions (Inoue & Moorman, 2014). Further, social workers are well versed in working with family systems as they navigate complex healthcare and decision-making processes (Dubus, 2010). Social workers are innovative and willing to form partnerships with other community leaders and professionals, and these interventions may lead to new community services to address the last stage of life (e.g., Kintzle & Bride, 2010). In addition to individual preferences, culture influences EOL care decisions (Bullock, 2011; Kelly et al., 2013). African-Americans may place trust in faith and familial systems instead of legal and medical systems (Bullock, 2011; Gerst & Burr, 2008). Further, Latinos may prefer family decision-making over autonomous choices regarding EOL decisions, although acculturation and health literacy need to be considered (Kelley et al., 2010). Lack of information

about the need for planning and hospice care is a known barrier to usage in ethnic communities (Jang, Chiriboga, Allen, Kwak, & Haley, 2010). Social workers often occupy positions that engage ethnic communities and can be instrumental in reducing these barriers. As the profession is increasing competencies in the delivery of culturally relevant care and assuming coordinating roles within healthcare systems, the discrepancy between desired EOL preferences and delivery of palliative care can be reduced by expanding the conversation and preparation for death. On a micro level social workers can help individuals and families negotiate the planning process, at the community level social workers can conduct culturally appropriate outreach, and at the organizational level social workers can help develop innovative EOL planning or care models. The profession of social work with its commitment to compassionate social justice must insure equitable access to early death preparation and EOL care. References Bern-Klug, M., Ekerdt, D., & Wilkinson, D. (1999). What families know about funeral-related costs: Implications for social work practice. Health and Social Work, 24, 128-137. doi: 10.1093/hsw/24.2.128 Bullock, K. (2011). The influence of culture on end-of-life decision making. Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life and Palliative Care, 7(1), 83-98. doi: 10.1080/15524256.2011.548048 Carr, D., & Khodyakov, D. (2007). End-of-life health care planning among young-old adults: An assessment of psychosocial influences. Journals of Gerontology, Series B, Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, 62, S135 S141. doi:10.1093/geronb/62.2.s135

Detering, K. M., Hancock, A. D., Reade, M. C., & Silvester, W. (2010). The impact of advance care planning on end of life care in elderly patients. British Medical Journal, 340, C1345. doi: 10.1136/bmj.c1345 (Published 24 March 2010) Dubus, N. (2010). Who cares for the caregivers? Why medical social workers belong on end-oflife care teams. Social Work in Health Care, 49(7), 603-617. doi: 10.1080/00981380903327921 Gerst, K., & Burr, J. A. (2008). Planning for end-of-life care: Black-white differences in the completion of advance directives. Research on Aging, 30(4), 428-449. doi: 10.1177/0164027508316618 Gwyther, L, Altilio, T., Blacker, S., Christ, G., Csikai, E., Hooyman, N., Kramer, B. Linton, J., Raymer, M., & Howe, J. (2005). Social work competencies in palliative and end-of-life care. Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life and Palliative Care, 1(1), 87-120. doi: 10.1300/J457v01n0106. Hanchate, A., Kornman, A. C., Young-Xu, Y., Ash, A. S., & Emanuel, E. (2009). Racial and ethnic differences in end-of-life costs: Why do minorities cost more than whites? Archives of Internal Medicine, 169(5), 493-501. doi: 10.1001/archinternmed.2008.616 Harper, S. (2014). Economic and social implications of aging societies. Science, 346, 587-591. doi: 10.1126/science.1254405 Inoue, M., & Moorman, S. (2014). Does end-of-life planning help spouses become better surrogates? Gerontologist. Advance online publication. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnu031 Jang, Y., Chiriboga, D. A., Allen, J. Y., Kwak, J. and Haley, W. E. (2010). Willingness of older Korean- American adults to use hospice. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 58, 352-356. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2009.02684.x

Kelley, A. S., Wenger, N., & Sarkisian, C. (2010), Opiniones: End-of-life care preferences and planning of older Latinos. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 58, 1109 1116. doi: 10.1111/j.1532-5415.2010.02853.x Kelley, A. S., Ettner, S., Morrison, R., Du, Q., Wenger, N., & Sarkisian, C. (2011). Determinants of medical expenditures in the last 6 months of life. Annals of Internal Medicine, 154(4), 235-242. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-154-4-201102150-00004 Kelly, C. M., Masters, J. L., & DeViney, S. (2013). End-of-life planning activities: An integrated process. Death Studies, 37(6), 529-551. doi: 10.1080/07481187.2011.653081 Kintzle, S., & Bride, B. E. (2010). Intervention following a sudden death: The social workmedical examiner model. Health & Social Work, 35, 221-224. doi: 10.1093/hsw/35.3.221 Kramer, B. J. (2013). Social workers' roles in addressing the complex end-of-life care needs of elders with advanced chronic disease. Journal of Social Work in End-of-Life and Palliative Care, 9(4), 308-330. doi: 10.1080/15524256.2013.846887 Moorman, S. M., & Inoue, M. (2013). Persistent problems in end-of-life planning among young and middle-aged American couples. Journals of Gerontology, Series B: Psychological Sciences and Social Sciences, 68(1), 97-106. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbs103 National Association of Social Workers (NASW). (2008). NASW Code of Ethics. Washington, DC: Author. Pew Research Center. (2013). Views on end-of-life medical treatments. Retrieved from http://www.pewforum.org/2013/11/21/views-on-end-of-life-medical-treatments/ Silveira, M., Kim, S., & Langa, K. (2010). Advance directives and outcomes of surrogate decision making before death. New England Journal of Medicine, 362, 1211 1218. doi: 10.1056/NEJMsa0907901

Sudore, R. L., Schickedanz, A. D., Landefeld, C. S., Williams, B. A., Lindquist, K., Pantilat, S. Z., & Schillinger, D. (2008). Engagement in multiple steps of the advance care planning process: A descriptive study of diverse older adults. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society, 56, 1006 1013. doi:10.1111/j.1532-5415.2008.01701.x