Ian Anderson
Continuing Education Program
in End-of Life Care
 
University of Toronto

       
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NOTE: AS OF MAY 1, 2007 THIS PROGRAM IS NO LONGER OFFERED; HOWEVER, THE MATERIALS REMAIN ACCESSIBLE ON THE WEBSITE.

MODULES & OBJECTIVES

Click on the underlined links to access the teaching module or PowerPoint presentation in PDF format.

Download the Adobe Acrobat Reader to access these files.

IMPORTANT NOTES:

  • When saved to your computer, the slide presentations must be opened in Acrobat Reader NOT PowerPoint.
  • To present the PDF file as a slide show in full screen format without the toolbars showing choose "VIEW" and then "FULL SCREEN".
  • Use the 'page up' and 'page down' buttons on your keyboard to advance and reverse the slides.
  • To exit full screen view, press the 'Esc' button.

How to access the teaching materials in different formats.

[Modules are formatted for double-sided printing and insertion into a binder.]


1. Palliative Care - Standards and Models

Including:

  • Definition of palliative care and its basic principles
  • Standards of palliative care.
  • Blocks in providing better end-of-life care and describe strategies to overcome such blocks
  • Models of palliative care delivery
  • The role of family physicians and specialist physicians in the care of the terminally ill
  • Community resources available to support patients in their homes
  • The physician’s role in home care
  • The roles of other disciplines in providing palliative care
  • Effective communication and team skills
  • Education of members of the interdisciplinary team
  • Being a role model for other physicians
  • Incorporating quality indicators or audit methods into their practice
  • Applying critical appraisal skills and the skills of evidence-based medicine to medical practice in end-of-life care
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS APPENDIX I: FERRIS SQUARE

2. Pain Management

Including:

  • Pain syndromes affecting patients at the EOL
  • The use of opioids and adjuvants
  • Management of the side effects and toxicities of opioids and adjuvants
  • Ethical issues around the use of analgesics/sedatives at the EOL
  • Use of non-pharmacological interventions
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS  

3. Symptom Management

Including:


4. End-of-Life Decision-Making

Including:

  • Constructing a care plan that includes patient centred goals of care
  • An approach to decision making for a capable and incapable patient
  • The role of advanced care planning
  • Be able to assess capacity in terms of EOL decision- making
  • Elements of consent
  • Use of life sustaining treatments
  • Ethical issues in the use of advanced directives including DNR orders
  • Withholding and withdrawing of therapies
  • Effects of personal and professional experiences of death and dying
  • The ethical and legal role of Substitute Decision Makers in EOL decision-making
  • Issues in euthanasia/assisted suicide
  • Caregiver stress
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS Aid to Capacity Evaluation (ACE)

Video: 'Making Hard Decisions'


5. Communication with Patients and Families

Including:

  • Components of effective communication
  • Breaking bad news, listening and responding to the needs (informational and emotional) of patients and their families
  • Addressing the concerns of the patient and family
  • Understanding consequences of the language used to impart information
  • Not destroying hope or providing false hope
  • Demonstrating empathy and caring
  • Being sensitive to issues of culture and religion
  • Recognizing difficulties in interacting with the patient and/or family and overcoming those difficulties
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS  

6. Psychological Symptoms

Including:

  • The physical, psychological, social and spiritual issues of dying patients and their families
  • Sources of suffering in dying patients
  • Treat anxiety, agitation and depression in dying patients
  • Fostering appropriate hope at the EOL
  • Providing counselling
  • Recognize normal grief and complicated grief
  • Grief management
  • Community resources for bereavement counseling
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS  

7. The Last Hours

Including:

  • The final hours of the dying process with the patient and family
  • Family communication with the dying person
  • Effective pain and symptom control in the last hours of life
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS  

8. Culture

Including:

  • Current societal and health care practice related to attitudes about death and dying
  • How culture and religion shape the understanding and meaning of death and dying
  • Accepting and integrating cultural and religious perspectives
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS  

9. Conflict Resolution

Including:

  • Common sources of conflict in EOL decision making
  • Physician attitudes, values and reaction to conflict that contribute to conflict with families
  • Factors of family dynamics, history and values
  • Basic principles and skills in conflict management
  • The issue of futility
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS  

10. Indigenous Perspectives on Death and Dying

Including:

  • Describe differences in culture, traditions and beliefs that may affect communication with indigenous people at the end of life
  • Demonstrate knowledge about the traditions surrounding death and dying in indigenous cultures
  • Describe how such traditions can be accommodated when caring for dying indigenous patients
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS  

11. Collaboration

Including:

  • Describe the importance of collaboration in the provision of quality end-of-life care
  • Describe the stages of team formation and development
  • Describe different types and styles of leadership and effects on team function
  • Reflect upon how own personal character, values and beliefs affect ability to work on a team
  • Describe and recognize issues that may arise when two teams converge to provide patient care
  • Demonstrate skill in resolving difficulties in team function
  • [ Note that this module is NOT CE accredited]
    MODULE NO SLIDES AVAILABLE
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS  

12. End-of-Life Decision-Making in Pediatric Palliative Care

Including:

  • Describe the major factors that complicate decision-making for children living with and dying from life-threatening conditions.
  • Improve knowledge about how to effectively involve families, children and adolescents, substitute decision-makers, and the healthcare team in pediatric decision-making
  • Be familiar with a variety of creative methods that can be used to communicate with young patients about care decisions and how to access these methods
  • Demonstrate an understanding of the legal, ethical, medical, and social aspects of decisions necessary in the field of pediatric palliative care related to:
    - Identifying the goals of care
    - Treatments aimed at ameliorating or curing disease
    - Treatments aimed at potentially life-sustaining treatments
    - Treatments aimed at relieving symptoms
    - Planning care for the last days and/or hours of life
    - Location of care
  • Understand that discussions concerning palliative care treatment options should begin early and continue as often as required with patients who may die prematurely and/or their families, and that such discussions can be conducted without eroding hope
  • Have an increased repertoire of statements, approaches, resources, and questions that can be used with patients and families when discussing palliative care options
  • Recognize that children and adolescents have an ever-evolving understanding of illness and death, and that assessments of this understanding should be done individually and repeatedly
  • Understand how to appropriately frame discussions and facilitate consensus-building during pediatric palliative care decision-making
  • List techniques for improving continuity with the healthcare team, and between the patient, family and healthcare providers during pediatric palliative care
  • Understand that disagreements are common during pediatric palliative care decision-making but that good communication skills and a structured process for working through disagreement can help prevent conflict in most cases
  • List a variety of methods for training healthcare professionals in pediatric palliative-care decision-making and for providing support for healthcare professionals doing this work
  • Become acquainted with the published literature concerning aspects of decision-making in pediatric palliative care
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS  

13. Grief and Bereavement: A Practical Approach

Including:

  • Define grief & bereavement
  • Describe some of the models of grief
  • Describe factors influencing grief
  • Describe complicated grief
  • Describe a practical approach in the management of grief
    MODULE SLIDES
    CASE & TEACHING TIPS  

Neurological Death, Organ and Tissue Donation Module


Click here for information on how to run a small group program using the modules.


Use this technique in your small group sessions to create another case.

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Laura Hawryluck, MSc, MD, FRCPC
Physician Leader

Nancy Bush, Coordinator

Ian Anderson Continuing Education Program
in End-of-Life Care
University of Toronto
500 University Avenue, Suite 650
Toronto, Ontario, Canada M5G 1V7
Tel. 416.978.1837    Fax 416.971.2200
E-mail
ian.anderson.program@utoronto.ca