Are completed ReSPECT plans facilitating person-centred care? An evaluation of completed plans in UK general practice

IF 2.1 Q3 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE Resuscitation plus Pub Date : 2024-09-21 DOI:10.1016/j.resplu.2024.100780
Caroline J. Huxley , Karin Eli , Claire A. Hawkes , Frances Griffiths , Martin Underwood , Gavin D. Perkins , Hazel Blanchard , Jenny Harlock , Julia Walsh , Anne-Marie Slowther
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Abstract

Background

The Recommended Summary Plan for Emergency Care and Treatment (ReSPECT) includes agreed clinical recommendations for a person’s care in a future emergency which have been informed by discussion of the person’s preferences. Previous evaluation of ReSPECT plans in acute NHS hospitals found inconsistencies in recording patient’s preferences and involvement in the plan, and infrequent justification for recommendations.

Aim

To explore to what extent ReSPECT recommendations reflect individual preferences, as documented in the plan.

Methods

ReSPECT plans of adults were collected from 11 General Practices in England. We adapted an evaluation tool used previously to analyse ReSPECT plans in acute settings. Free text sections for individual values/preferences and clinical recommendations were examined for clarity, consistency and congruency between them.

Results

We retrieved 141 ReSPECT plans. Patients or those close to the patient were recorded as being consulted in most plans (94%). Individual preferences were completed in 57% of plans. Clinical recommendations reflected individual preferences by directly referencing the person and their preferences (31%), by being consistent with the documented preferences (30%), or by using the same wording as the preferences (6%).

Conclusion

While many clinical recommendations reflect individual preferences, the preferences themselves are only recorded in just over half of ReSPECT plans. This is problematic, because the recording of individual preferences facilitates person-centred care, both directly by informing recommendations and indirectly when used to guide decision-making in situations not anticipated in the plan. Future training for clinicians should emphasize the need to document the personal values section of the plan.
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已完成的 ReSPECT 计划是否促进了以人为本的护理?对英国全科诊所已完成计划的评估
背景急诊护理和治疗建议摘要计划(ReSPECT)包括对患者未来急诊护理的临床建议,这些建议是在与患者讨论其偏好后提出的。目的 探讨 ReSPECT 建议在多大程度上反映了计划中记录的个人偏好。方法 从英格兰的 11 家综合医院收集了成人的 ReSPECT 计划。我们对之前用于分析急诊环境中 ReSPECT 计划的评估工具进行了调整。我们对个人价值/偏好和临床建议的自由文本部分进行了检查,以确定它们之间的清晰度、一致性和一致性。根据记录,大多数计划(94%)都咨询了患者或与患者关系密切者的意见。57%的计划中填写了个人偏好。临床建议通过直接引用患者及其偏好(31%)、与记录的偏好一致(30%)或使用与偏好相同的措辞(6%)来反映个人偏好。结论虽然许多临床建议反映了个人偏好,但偏好本身仅记录在略高于一半的 ReSPECT 计划中。这是个问题,因为记录个人偏好有助于以人为本的护理,既能直接为建议提供依据,又能在计划未预见的情况下间接用于指导决策。今后对临床医生的培训应强调记录计划中个人价值观部分的必要性。
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来源期刊
Resuscitation plus
Resuscitation plus Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine, Emergency Medicine
CiteScore
3.00
自引率
0.00%
发文量
0
审稿时长
52 days
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