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End-of-Life Care in an Acute Care Hospital: Linking Policy and Practice

journal contribution
posted on 2023-05-18, 03:00 authored by Iedema, R, Sorensen, R
The care of people who die in hospitals is often suboptimal. Involving patients in decisions about their care is seen as one way to improve care outcomes. Federal and state government policymakers in Australia are promoting shared decision making in acute care hospitals as a means to improve the quality of end-of-life care. If policy is to be effective, health care professionals who provide hospital care will need to respond to its patient-centered purpose. Health services will also be called upon to train health care professionals to work with dying people in a more participatory way and to assist them to develop the clinical processes that support shared decision making. Health professionals who manage clinical workplaces become central in reshaping this practice environment by promoting patient-centered care policy objectives and restructuring health service systems to routinely incorporate patient and family preferences about care at key points in the patient's care episode.

History

Publication title

Death Studies: Education - Counseling - Care - Law - Ethics

Volume

35

Issue

6

Pagination

481-503

ISSN

0748-1187

Department/School

School of Nursing

Publisher

Brunner/Mazel Inc

Place of publication

1900 Frost Rd, Ste 101, Bristol, USA, Pa, 19007-1598

Repository Status

  • Restricted

Socio-economic Objectives

Clinical health not elsewhere classified

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    University Of Tasmania

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