• Aucun résultat trouvé

Accompanying our patients at the end of their journey

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2022

Partager "Accompanying our patients at the end of their journey"

Copied!
1
0
0

Texte intégral

(1)

860

Canadian Family Physician Le Médecin de famille canadien

|

VOL 60: SEPTEMBER • SEPTEMBRE 2014

Cumulative Profile | College

Collège

Accompanying our patients at the end of their journey

Francine Lemire

MD CM CCFP FCFP CAE, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR AND CHIEF EXECUTIVE OFFICER Dear Colleagues,

The CFPC recently held an invitational colloquium on end-of-life care. Other professional associations (the Canadian Medical Association and the Canadian Society of Palliative Care Physicians, among others) are also engaging their members in discussing these issues. There will eventually be specifc communication from the CFPC’s task force on end-of-life care, but I want to share with you here some of the elements of our discussion that will make me pause for further refection.

Important demographic trends are upon us. By 2030, more than 20% of the Canadian population will be older than 65 years of age.1 Canadians will live longer, and many will need to cope with 2 or more chronic illnesses, contributing to frailty and vulnerability in old age.

Family physicians’ involvement in the lives of seriously ill and dying patients is changing. For a variety of reasons (eg, barriers of time and money, and involvement of multi- ple providers, often in hospital settings), family physicians have become less involved in end-of-life care. Yet new legislative requirements, such as those in Quebec, com- bined with changing demographic trends and societal atti- tudes about death and dying beg renewed and enhanced involvement of family doctors in end-of-life care.

Standardized definitions and terminology mat- ter. Participants in the colloquium found that defini- tions used in a background document (that will ultimately be published) were helpful, especially the distinction between physician-assisted suicide (PAS) and euthanasia. It is understood that it will be diffcult to achieve complete consistency of defnitions, but efforts to clarify terms as much as possible are important for governments, policy makers, and clinicians, as well as for patients and their circles of support. There was a sense that the term pallia- tive sedation was often used inappropriately and might be confused with euthanasia (which it is not), and that there was a need to properly defne some terms (eg, medical aid in dying), as well as to rethink others (eg, PAS vs physician assistance in dying).

Important legal and ethical issues challenge our profes- sion in considering PAS and euthanasia. Dr Jos Welie, Professor of Health Ethics in the Center for Health Policy and Ethics at Creighton University in Omaha, Neb, and Mr Hugh Scher, a lawyer specializing in health, employ- ment, and human rights law, provided their perspectives on these issues and encouraged us to think about our own values, motivations, and perspectives in response to patient requests for PAS or euthanasia. How should we approach such requests? Is it “OK” to say no? If family Cet article se trouve aussi en français à la page 859.

physicians work in a legislative framework that permits PAS or euthanasia, what are their legal and ethical obliga- tions regarding referrals for such practices?

Family physicians have an important role to play in end- of-life care, including advance care planning. Advance care planning was not a specifc topic of discussion but it came up in relation to our need to approach pallia- tive care as a public health issue. Advance care planning needs to be “owned” by each of us, in discussion with patients’ family members and circles of support. However, we as family physicians, accompanying our patients for the little and big things in life, need to encourage them to plan for the end of their lives, provide them with appro- priate resources, and be there, when needed, to answer their questions.2 The members of the Advisory Committee on Family Practice, with support from our staff in the department of Health Policy and Government Relations, have developed advance care planning resources aimed at patients, which will be available on the CFPC website in the future.

For me, this colloquium reinforced the importance of preparing future family physicians to accompany their patients on the last journey, and to provide—together with a team of compassionate, well prepared clinicians—

superb palliative care. The discussion also validated the work we are currently doing to support enhanced skills in family medicine in palliative care. Dr Bill Sullivan, Chair of the CFPC’s Committee on Ethics, concluded the meeting by emphasizing the importance of family physi- cians affrming their own commitment to caring for their patients who are at the end of life, and gave examples of how we could express this commitment to them. With his permission, I am pleased to share them with you:

We won’t give up on you;

We will aggressively treat pain and suffering;

We will care for your family;

We will never doubt you;

We won’t force treatment on you;

We will inform you; and

We will always listen to you and help you with advance care planning.

Acknowledgment

I thank Dr Bill Sullivan and Mr Eric Mang for their review of this article.

References

1. Léonard A. Canada’s aging population and public policy. 1. Statistical overview.

Ottawa, ON: Library of Parliament; 2011.

2. College of Family Physicians of Canada. CFPC summary report. Colloquium on end-of-life care: addressing the family medicine perspective. Mississauga, ON:

College of Family Physicians of Canada; 2014.

Références

Documents relatifs

ICOMOS Japan National Committee c/o Japan Cultural Heritage Consultancy Iwanami Shoten Hitotsubashi. Bldg 13F, Hitotsubashi 2-5-5 Chiyoda-ku, TOKYO 101-0003 T/F: +81 3

A s an attorney and advocate for patient safety, I believe the authors of the Motherisk article that appeared in the August 2013 issue of Canadian Family Physician give

We stand in a position of having to make decisions which are right, proper, decent decisions that may be hard for the immediate future but decisions that must safeguard

OBJECTIVE To determine the effect of the Queen’s University alternative funding plan (AFP) on the Department of Family Medicine in terms of patient, staff, and faculty

I am pleased to report to you that, pursuant to the provisions of the British Columbia Centennial '71 Celebrations Act passed at the last Session of this House, the British

Our government will ensure that Manitoba families have access to safe, convenient child care, which is essential to improving education and employment opportunities for parents..

To do so, we convened an inquiry team of community leaders, Knowledge Keepers, NIC faculty, and nursing students to work together to guide the development of an

1993: 165), dealing with this period for which there are no historical references, the monarchy arrived with the last migration to the Island of Bioko under a chief called Muametó,