WIHI - A Podcast from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement
Health & Fitness:Medicine
Date: August 30, 2012
Featuring:
We have lots of meaningful conversations in the course of our lives, but topping the list has to be talking with family members and loved ones about our own — or their — wishes for care at the end of life. Despite the inevitability of death, for many of us this is the last conversation we either want to have or know how to have; it can be especially difficult to initiate. And yet, without these discussions, we or our loved ones run the risk of running headlong into a medical crisis and getting care we don’t want, and not getting the care we do.
Back in January, WIHI offered listeners a preview of a ground-breaking, grass-roots initiative aimed at changing this state of affairs. The Conversation Project — whose goal is that everyone’s end-of-life wishes will be expressed and respected — launched in August 2012 in collaboration with IHI, and some of its key founders and creators are back in the WIHI studio on August 30 to explain what the effort is all about and how you can participate.
From the get-go, Ellen Goodman’s vision has been that end-of-life conversations need to become normalized — and that the best place to have the conversation is at the kitchen table, not in the ICU. To support its public campaign, The Conversation Project has created a website that will act as ground zero for collecting and spreading stories, sharing tips and templates to help people get started, and facilitating the networking that’s crucial when trying to bring about cultural change. The latest social media tools (Facebook, Twitter, and YouTube) will be available to extend the reach and impact of what everyone is learning along the way.
IHI’s Martha Hayward joins Ellen Goodman on WIHI to discuss how The Conversation Project can accelerate efforts to make health care more patient- and family-centered — and not just pertaining to end-of-life care, but with a myriad of health issues. WIHI host Madge Kaplan also welcomes Larry Weber from W2 Group, whose knowledge of social media and its potential to unleash social change has been a critical component of the development of The Conversation Project.
WIHI: Working Toward Health Equity
WIHI: SBAR: Structured Communication and Psychological Safety in Health Care
WIHI: Violence Prevention and Community Health
WIHI: Patients as Partners in QI Research
WIHI: New Leadership Skills for Better Health and Health Care
WIHI: Improving Safety and Satisfaction in Ambulatory Care
WIHI: Who’s Conversation Ready? How Health Care Can Respect End-of-Life Wishes
WIHI: New Staffing Models for Primary Care
WIHI: Recognizing Person- and Family-Centered Care: Always Events at IHI
WIHI: On the (Virtual) Road with Mobile Clinics and Population Health
WIHI: Integrating Physical and Behavioral Health
WIHI: Slowdown in the Growth of US Health Care Spending
WIHI: The Ground Game of the Partnership for Patients
WIHI: Large-Scale Change Across a Country: Learning from Scotland
WIHI: Measure Up, (Blood) Pressure Down: 80% by 2016
WIHI: Reliable Practices for Responding to Natural Disasters: Lessons from Long Island Jewish and Hurricane Sandy
WIHI: Home for Life, Aging, and Aging in Place
WIHI: Engaging Patients in Safety — Live from London and the International Forum on Quality and Safety
WIHI: Community Health Needs Assessments, Part 2: Lessons from North Carolina
WIHI: Community Health Needs Assessments, Part 1
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