Neurology Resident Attitudes Surrounding Advanced Care Planning and Efficacy of Palliative Care Education Session
Katrina Pasao1, Tiffany Hu1, Christopher Campos1, Kathleen Irwin1
1Neurology, University of California, Davis
Objective:

The objective is to assess neurology resident attitudes surrounding Advanced Care Planning (ACP) and determine if educational sessions increased the number of Physician Orders for Life Sustaining Treatment (POLSTs).


Background:

Studies show that providers express discomfort surrounding ACP and interest in didactics on this topic. This project was undertaken as part of a larger quality improvement initiative to improve knowledge around ACP in neurology.


Design/Methods:

A one-hour interactive ACP education session was hosted by a Palliative Care physician in November 2023. The session focused on POLSTs as they are accessible to providers and patients. Anonymous surveys to determine attitudes surrounding ACP were collected pre- and post-session. Chart review was done to track POLSTs signed during hospitalizations five months before and after the education session (June 2023-April 2024) for patients discharged from the stroke service. 

 


Results:

Out of 22 session attendees, 13 responses were collected (59.09%). At baseline, attendees appeared to value ACP with 69.23% reporting it was “extremely important” to initiate ACP discussions. However, only 15.39% of attendees were “extremely likely” to initiate these discussions and 23.08% of attendees had never filled out a POLST. Attendees identified lack of knowledge and time as barriers to ACP discussions. After the education session, 84.62% of attendees were “extremely likely” to initiate ACP discussions, 46.15% were “extremely comfortable” identifying POLST candidates (0% prior to session) and 76.92% felt “extremely comfortable” filling out a POLST (7.7% prior to session). However, in the five months after the session, there was no increase in the uploaded POLSTs for discharged stroke patients.

 


Conclusions:

Despite positive feedback to an ACP education session, there was no change in uploaded POLSTs post-session. This emphasizes a need for systematic, multidisciplinary approaches to increase frequency of ACP discussions and subsequent POLST completions for patients with neurological disease.


10.1212/WNL.0000000000212717
Disclaimer: Abstracts were not reviewed by Neurology® and do not reflect the views of Neurology® editors or staff.