difficult conversations -the views of terminally ill people & their families

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS – THE VIEWS OF TERMINALLY ILL PEOPLE & THEIR FAMILIES Dr Phil McCarvill 8 th July 2014 @MarieCuriePA

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Dr Phil McCarvill, Head of Policy and Public Affairs at Marie Curie Cancer Care spoke on 8 July 2014 on ‘Difficult Conversations – The Views of Terminally Ill People & Their Families’. We are continuing to increase our understanding of experiences of end of life using evidence including the Marie Curie Atlas, independent evaluations, user, patient and carer feedback and social media. Here in his presentation, Dr McCarvill lays out difficult conversation themes that he revealed during interview processes with terminally ill patients, their family members and carers. The themes of a good death, the journey, the family, the system and the carers are presented to encourage communication to help us ensure the right care for terminally ill people and their families. For more information on commissioning, have a look at our website mariecurie.org.uk/commissioning or get in touch at [email protected]

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Page 1: Difficult Conversations -The Views of Terminally Ill People & Their Families

DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS – THE VIEWS OF TERMINALLY ILL PEOPLE & THEIR FAMILIES

Dr Phil McCarvill8th July 2014 @MarieCuriePA

Page 2: Difficult Conversations -The Views of Terminally Ill People & Their Families

MARIE CURIE

• Major UK end of life charity • Major service provider – Network of 2000 Nurses caring for

people in the last few hours and days of life – 1.3 million hours of nursing in 2012-13

• 9 hospices across the UK reach 8,000 people each year• Our services reached a total of 38,777 people in 2012-13• Major funder of academic and health service research with an

Open Access research policy • Working to influence policy and practice through our policy

and public affairs work.

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DELIVERING HIGH QUALITY SERVICES

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UNDERSTANDING THE EVIDENCE: MARIE CURIE END OF LIFE CARE ATLAS

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Page 5: Difficult Conversations -The Views of Terminally Ill People & Their Families

DEMONSTRATING IMPACT – INDEPENDENT EVALUATIONS

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USING EVIDENCE: USER FEEDBACK

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USING SOCIAL MEDIA

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TALKING TO TERMINALLY ILL PEOPLE AND THEIR FAMILIES

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS

• We wanted to test the idea that you can not carry out research with terminally ill people

• Conducted in-depth interviews with terminally ill people (different diagnoses), their carers and bereaved relatives

• Focus on experiences of care: what worked & what’s missing?

• These were difficult conversations, but, ultimately they provide a much-needed reality check

• Will help us ensure the right care for terminally ill people and their families

• Failure to do so means that an individual dies in discomfort or pain & family can be left with regrets, guilt and unanswered questions. 9

Page 10: Difficult Conversations -The Views of Terminally Ill People & Their Families

DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS – KEY THEMES – A GOOD DEATH

• Little understanding of the specific concept of planning a ‘good death’

• Most people understood what the key aspects of care and support that can help to ensure a good death are. Being comfortable, pain-free, in a familiar place and surrounded by friends and families were all identified

• Perceptions often shaped by previous negative experiences or accounts from friends and family

• Even where people had planned their ideal could be thwarted by unforeseen developments & lack of available services.

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS: A GOOD DEATH

I always said when I die I don’t want to die at home, I want to die, if possible, in a hospice. I don’t want to put on anybody the burden of having to look after me at home and I think if I can go to a hospice if there is a place then … I’d be much happier. - Person with cancer

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Page 12: Difficult Conversations -The Views of Terminally Ill People & Their Families

DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS: THE JOURNEY

• The journey from terminal diagnosis to death is different for everyone. No two deaths are the same and no two families’ experiences are identical

• For some the journey is measured in weeks and months, for others it lasts many years

• Different conditions – different journeys, but common experiences particularly in last few days

• Families highlight absence of a road map – what can you expect and what support is available?

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS: THE JOURNEY

So unfortunately it’s definitely progressed quite aggressively in the last 10 years. I’ve just had eight days in hospital in February with a UTI and I must say the time I spent in the hospital was very difficult and it’s always, ‘is this the one that’s going to get me?’ — i.e. the infection.

Person with MS

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Page 14: Difficult Conversations -The Views of Terminally Ill People & Their Families

THE DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS

• For many people, talking about death and dying is difficult • Lack of experience & fear about what lies ahead• One or both parties may be in denial• No talking – no care planning • Key role of health and social care professionals, but

quality of conversations is variable• Importance of advance planning for people with cognitive

degenerative conditions.

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS

The doctors were very clear it was terminal, and straight after he was told he wanted to have a conversation with me about his pension, getting things in order, so I know he understood he was dying. But I was too upset to discuss things like that then, and after that he never wanted to talk about it even when I tried to open a conversation …. All we had was small talk.

Bereaved carer – husband with cancer

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS: THE FAMILY

• A terminal diagnosis brings major upheavals for individuals and families

• Roles change • Major decisions to be made • Those involved often seek to protect one another from

upset and stress • Individuals want a whole family approach which reflects

the needs, concerns and uncertainties of both terminally people and those around them.

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS: THE FAMILY

We carried her from the bedroom downstairs to the family room where we had a hospital bed in the daytime… she was not conscious. Even so we were all just around there with her…

Bereaved carer – daughter with cancer

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS: THE SYSTEM

• Perception – system is not built around the needs of terminally ill people and their families

• The division between health and social care services, number of different services and providers & lack of 24/7 services create a ‘fog’ of confusion

• Real differences in services available to people with different conditions

• Terminally ill people and their families find it difficult to navigate the system

• Many people do not know who does what, when and where.

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS: THE SYSTEM

Each time I go to an appointment I think they’re going to tell me something that will show me the way clearly… it’s just bewildering … I can’t get to the bottom of it.

Person with Parkinson’s

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS: THE CARERS

• Many family members take on new caring roles• For caring can become all-consuming at the expense of

carers’ own wellbeing • Carers experience a parallel journey• For many caring is also a uniquely fulfilling experience,

bringing the terminally ill person and carer closer together and, for some, making the bereavement process more bearable.

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DIFFICULT CONVERSATIONS: THE CARERS

I was very grateful for that three months … I feel very proud of myself. Proud I did that for Mum.

Bereaved carer – mother with cancer

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Page 22: Difficult Conversations -The Views of Terminally Ill People & Their Families

PUTTING TERMINALLY ILL PEOPLE & THEIR FAMILIES AT THE CENTRE

• Context – Leadership Alliance – Five Priorities for Care • As we redesign end of life care to meet the twin challenges

of demographic change and financial pressures, we must ensure that build services around what terminally ill people and their families need, not what makes sense to those providing services

• Greater support to enable families to have the difficult conversations

• Support people to die in the place of their choice, pain-free and surrounded by the people who matter.

• Download the report & follow @MarieCuriePA for updates 22

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THANK YOU

FOR YOUR TIME