Skip to main content

FAmily-CEntered (FACE) Advance Care Planning

An Effective Practice

Description

FAmily-CEntered (FACE) Advance Care Planning facilitates courageous conversations about treatment preferences for future medical conditions through a series of 60-minute structured weekly sessions. Conversations are facilitated with the help of a trained, certified facilitator. Adolescents and adults living with a serious medical condition participate with their chosen surrogate decision-maker (or their legal guardian if they are under 18 years old). First, dyads complete the Lyon Advance Care Planning Survey to determine the patient's palliative care needs and to determine if the surrogate knows the needs of the patient. Second, dyads come together for a facilitated conversation about shared decision-making. This conversation provides an opportunity to express fears, values, spiritual and other beliefs, and goals with regards to death and dying. Lastly, the patient completes The Five Wishes, a legal document that helps a person express how she wants to be treated if she were seriously ill and unable to speak for herself.

Goal / Mission

The goal of FACE-ACP is to give adolescents and adults living with a serious medical condition a voice by facilitating conversations between patients and their caregivers so they can achieve their goals and match medical treatment to their goals.

Results / Accomplishments

A randomized controlled trial of patients in a pediatric oncology program who participated in FACE-ACP showed that adolescents and young adults are capable of participating in and understanding the consequences of their decision(s), value autonomous decision making without excluding loved ones, and want to participate in shared decision making. Patients who received FACE-ACP counseling expressed higher congruence in decision-making with their families and were more likely to limit treatments with marginal outcomes. Program participation enabled families to honor their loved one's wishes regarding resuscitation, the place of their loved one's death, and pain control. These findings suggest a potential for avoiding conflict during a medical crisis.

About this Promising Practice

Organization(s)
Gunderson Health System, Children's National Medical Center
Primary Contact
Linda Briggs
Gunderson Health System
1900 S. Avenue Mailstop ALEX
LaCrosse, WI 54601
608-775-5279
labriggs@gundluth.org
http://www.respectingchoices.org
Topics
Health / Children's Health
Health / Adolescent Health
Health / Other Conditions
Organization(s)
Gunderson Health System, Children's National Medical Center
Source
Children's National Medical Center
Date of implementation
1995
Location
Washington, D.C.
For more details
Target Audience
Teens, Adults, Families
Submitted By
Children's National Medical Center

Health Data

More Information

Priority Areas

More Information

Resources

More Information

SHAPE Riverside