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2 Kasım 2016 Çarşamba

"Just say death!" Plays teach healthcare workers about end-of-life care

Seth Goodburn seemed fit and well until two weeks before he was diagnosed with pancreatic cancer. He died just 33 days after diagnosis, spending much of that short time in hospital. In the emotional whirlwind of coping with the poor prognosis his wife, Lesley, felt their hopes for Seth’s end-of-life care were sidelined by medical professionals trying to do their job.


“The NHS focuses on the medicine and trying to fix people even when that’s not possible,” she says. “A lot of the conversations and decisions that we might have made were overshadowed by dealing with what was the next medical treatment and intervention.”


There is an ongoing conversation in the medical profession about how to care for terminally ill patients, given that the profession’s instinct is to preserve life. The issue is just one of many being address by Brian Daniels, a playwright commissioned by the National Council for Palliative Care (NCPC) to tell stories such as Goodburn’s through plays, and help educate healthcare professionals about patients and families’ experiences of end-of-life care.


Homeward Bound, a play based on a series of letters Lesley Goodburn wrote, in the months after her husband’s death, to medical professionals involved in his care, launched NCPC’s national conference this year to an audience of 300 healthcare workers.


In addition, Daniels’ plays on early onset dementia and palliative care for those with disabilities, have been performed in hospitals, hospices, care homes and to general audiences across the country. Daniels says: “[They] take people out of their professional role for a minute to look at the family and human side of the people they’re dealing with.”


For Goodburn, that human aspect is key. She could not fault the professionalism of those involved in caring for her husband, but says poor communication could leave the couple feeling worse. “There were just so many things where people weren’t cruel or unkind or deliberately unthinking, but just didn’t really think about what it was like to be me and Seth. He went from being well and living a normal life to suddenly being told that he was dying.” She says, for example, a physiotherapist asked Seth to march on the spot as part of an assessment to see if he was able to go home, as he had previously wished, seemingly unaware that his condition had deteriorated and he was dying.



Don


An actor in Don’t Leave Me Now. Photograph: NCPC

Claire Henry, chief executive of the NCPC, says plays such as Homeward Bound are designed to encourage medical professionals to reflect on the people going through this traumatic process. “We obviously work very closely with people who have experience and they tell us their stories. Some are good, some not so good. Healthcare professionals don’t go to work to do a bad job, but sometimes they don’t think of things that affect people in a broader sense.”


What impact does a play have that a lecture, for instance, cannot? Don’t Leave Me Now, another play by Daniels, about early onset dementia, was performed at St Gemma’s hospice in Leeds to an audience including nurses, housekeeping staff and workers from other local hospices. Dr Mike Stockton, its director of medicine and consultant in palliative medicine, says the play enabled them to see some of families’ and patients’ challenges through a different lens. “It’s sometimes hard to have a full understanding … of what people may be going through and the reasons behind their actions or the emotional challenges, adjustments or the resilience that people need.”


Lynn Cawley agrees. There was barely a dry eye at a performance at Morley Arts Festival in October of Bounce Back Boy, the powerful dramatisation of her adopted son, Josh’s, story. Josh was severely disabled following a serious head injury as a baby, and later adopted by Cawley. Despite pioneering medical treatment throughout Josh’s life, Cawley says he was denied admission as an inpatient to a local hospice because his needs were too complex, and died a difficult death at home. She is fighting to end what she describes as end of life discrimination against those with disabilities.


Cawley thinks a play is an effective way of communicating that message, and for getting people to think about palliative care more broadly. She says: “When it’s someone’s real life story, people put themselves in it [and] they might think of a patient that they know. We hope that it will change policy but also people’s attitudes.”


For Stockton, working in a hospice, the wider issue of how treatment is balanced with patient comfort is a daily consideration. He says the two can often be done together: “It is about having early, thorough, open, honest, transparent conversations with people about what they want.”


For Cawley, as a carer and mother who went through the palliative process, those open conversations about dying are key. “We even find it hard to say the word,” she says. “When we’re watching Casualty on a Saturday night and they’re trying to tell a relative that somebody is dying, but they won’t say the word dying or death, we’re just like – say death!”


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"Just say death!" Plays teach healthcare workers about end-of-life care

10 Eylül 2016 Cumartesi

Don’t blame the fashion world for the cult of skinny – even Roald Dahl plays his part | Hadley Freeman

It’s September, which means – exciting! – it’s fashion Groundhog Day again. This consists of fashion weeks starting up, followed swiftly by the announcement of a political initiative to protect women against this evil on the catwalk. (Another feature of fashion Groundhog Day, incidentally, is a slew of articles by male columnists expressing bafflement at why the models are so thin, which can be summed up as: “I don’t find this sexy, so why?!” However would we know how to look without men telling us what turns them on?)


Anyway, the latest initiative comes courtesy of the Women’s Equality party, which has launched a campaign demanding, among other things, that British designers and retailers stop using size zero clothes in shows and photoshoots. This, the WEP claims, “will tackle negative body image issues and eating disorders”.


I’m going to ignore the all-too-predictable connection between fashion models and eating disorders here, because I’ve written enough for this lifetime about how absurdly reductive it is to suggest that a mental illness is caused by Vogue. Instead, I’ll say this: the WEP is perfectly within its rights to address this issue, but – spoiler alert – it will not make a blind bit of difference. There have been efforts to legislate against fashion’s obsession with skinniness in the past; these laws, wherever they’re passed, always get a lot of play, because the media love a story that allows them to run a photo of a skinny model at least as much as the fashion industry likes the skinny model herself.


So it would be understandable if you were confused as to why things haven’t changed. The problem is not only that the laws are rarely enforced, but also that they are the equivalent of rearranging the Titanic’s deck chairs. For a start, fashion is too international for one country’s legislation to make a difference – especially, I’m sorry to say, when it’s this country doing the legislating. With the exception of Burberry, British-based fashion companies simply do not spend enough on international advertising for any laws to have an effect; the rest of the world won’t even see the photographs. Slapping legislation on a tiny British brand will not change the aesthetic if Chanel and Prada can carry on as before.


While fashion represents the connection between skinniness and perfection in its purest form, it is also the end point. By the time a woman is looking at fashion photography, she’ll have gone through years of indoctrination that the less of her there is, the better. It’s there in all the children’s books and films, in which the evil women are plump and the nice ones are slender (Roald Dahl is especially bad on this). It’s there in pretty much every film ever made (the only person I’ve interviewed with an evident eating disorder was not a model but an actress). And it’s there in the general atmosphere of being female today, the things you grow up hearing the adult women around you saying about their bodies, the way they decline dessert. According to a report just published by the Children’s Society, teenage girls are unhappier than ever, especially with their bodies, which they compare unfavourably with those of their friends and celebrities.


This masochistic tendency towards self‑erasure is a complicated issue, something a well‑meaning but overly simplistic campaign against thinness in fashion can’t fix. The WEP has also suggested including body-image lessons as part of the school curriculum, which is a better idea (and, tellingly, it has had less pick-up, what with it lacking the vital excuse for a photograph of a model). But instead of fussing about the meaningless phrase “size zero”, or conflating thinness with anorexia, the WEP would be more effective if it looked at the prevalence of eating disorders in the fashion industry and exposed this. Instead of pretending it can tell fashion editors what to put in their magazines, the WEP could talk to them to get a more realistic sense of the problem, and get them on side.


If we really want to end the association between female skinniness and female aspiration, women need to be doing this on an individual, focused level, not leaving it to politicians to act on an amorphous, collective one. Look at the way you talk about your body and what you eat, especially in front of young girls. Call out publications that condescend to larger women and feature photographs only of slim ones. Remind your female friends and your daughters that their jeans size is not a measurement of their personal value.


It is easy to damn the fashion industry for promoting skinny as the feminine ideal. It’s harder to admit that it is only echoing back too many of our own darkest thoughts, our own self-loathing.



Don’t blame the fashion world for the cult of skinny – even Roald Dahl plays his part | Hadley Freeman

13 Mart 2014 Perşembe

Basic practice plays a part in driving top quality and strengthening overall health services

View of the A39 road from Porlock hill near Porlock in exmoor National Park somerset England UK

GPs are ‘on a extremely essential journey to delivering enhanced local community-based mostly providers for individuals …’ says Sam Everington. Photograph: Alamy




A combination of an unprecedented monetary challenge, an ageing population and a wish by patients to be handled in the community anytime feasible, generates a challenge and an chance for common practice.


In Tower Hamlets, around 2% of individuals, who are largely housebound or terminally sick, currently get proactive, co-ordinated care from their GP, district nurses, social services, psychological overall health trust and other community companies. This is managed by using virtual wards and multidisciplinary regular monthly group meetings. Nonetheless, we estimate that up to 25% of patients in the long term will want this variety of proactive approach to minimise the chance of hospital admissions. This kind of an technique offers a win-win scenario, greater worth for funds for the NHS and, a lot more importantly, it’s greater for sufferers who say they want to keep at house. It also builds on a method of basic practice that several nations consider to be 1 of the best in the globe.


In Tower Hamlets every single surgical treatment is now component of a federation, sharing experiences and skills, and operating together to give integrated care and provide key clinical outcomes – 94% immunisation prices for MMR and the ideal cholesterol and blood pressure control in the nation for diabetic and ischaemic heart ailment are some of our achievements.


Basic practice has a wealth of patient data that can be utilised to drive high quality and support enhance solutions. For example, we have co-designed dashboards across Tower Hamlets with information-sharing agreements which let us to evaluate outcomes and find out from each and every other. It also means we can draw a lot more funding into common practice and share personnel. Examples consist of sharing a diabetic nurse across practices who is too costly to employ on our personal.


A report from The King’s Fund suggests that federations move in the direction of end result-primarily based contracting with commissioners encompassing population wellness, patient experience, accessibility and monetary efficiency. In Tower Hamlets this has manufactured a critical variation, but I would go a step more and propose that nearby contracts need to be co-developed by suppliers and commissioners, as they have been right here. The present procurement method is also rigid and inflexible and maintaining them apart does not work. Wellness is a complicated system.


To realise the report’s vision of family care networks delivering truly integrated care with the patient at the centre, suppliers and commissioners want to work collectively to co-create contracts that supply the correct outcomes for patients. Conflicts of curiosity can be negated through openness and transparency with non-clinical directors and lay members on the CCG board creating decisions in such instances. What shouldn’t occur is that the dread of a conflict of interest prevents modern doing work that much better meets patients’ needs.


The King’s Fund report does not propose replacing the national contract on the contrary its suggestions offer you an chance to shift care and sources into the local community primarily based on clinical proof and patient feedback.


We also need to have to think about the role of consultants. They need to adopt an integrated, total population method across different clinical pathways. Our diabetic advisor is accountable for every single diabetic patient in the federation. A huge ask? Our advisor has offered training sessions, support for problematic instances and is always on the end of a telephone to provide guidance. This has observed a large shift to a lot more diabetic care currently being provided in the neighborhood making it possible for him to focus on people they truly need to see in hospital.


Any new model should sit alongside and be in addition to the present 1. It is crucial not to underestimate the significance of winning over hearts and minds to be successful standard practice wants to see for itself the benefits of this new way of functioning. As we have seen in Tower Hamlets, main and secondary care providers and commissioners require to have the area and time to develop local solutions and find for themselves the “magnificent unintended consequences” that this way of doing work offers. The King’s Fund report starts us on a extremely crucial journey to delivering improved local community-based mostly services for individuals and reversing the decline in resourcing for main care.


Dr Sam Everington has been a GP in Tower Hamlets for twenty many years


This report is published by Guardian Expert. Join the Healthcare Pros Network to acquire normal emails and exclusive delivers.




Basic practice plays a part in driving top quality and strengthening overall health services