Keywords

advance care planning, communication, palliative nursing, primary palliative care

 

Authors

  1. Head, Barbara Anderson PhD, CHPN, ACSW, FPCN
  2. Song, Mi-Kyung PhD, RN, FAAN
  3. Wiencek, Clareen PhD, ACNP-C, ACHPN
  4. Nevidjon, Brenda MSN, RN, FAAN
  5. Fraser, Debbie MN, RNC-NIC
  6. Mazanec, Polly PhD, ACNP-C, AOCN, ACHPN, FPCN

Abstract

Advance care planning (ACP) is an essential component of quality palliative care that requires expert communication skills. Nurses are often the health care provider patients and families rely on when exploring their values and preferences and making treatment decisions. Therefore, communication and ACP was one of the 3 areas of practice addressed during the Palliative Nursing Summit. This article summarizes patient outcomes and nursing actions recommended by summit participants related to communication and ACP. Areas addressed included education, clinical care, research, and policy/regulation. Recommended patient outcomes included the honoring of patient/family preferences and the inclusion of ACP discussions during routine care and across the life span. Recommended nursing actions included the following: (1) nursing education (both undergraduates and practicing nurses) and competencies related to communication and ACP be developed and implemented; (2) primary palliative care, including communication and ACP, be included in the practice standards of all nursing specialties; (3) health care systems support conversations about ACP and related documentation; (4) research be conducted related to the implementation of patient/family preferences and related health care utilization; and (5) regulation and reimbursement be crafted to support nursing practice related to ACP and related conversations at the nurses' full level of expertise.