1 / 4

SHRTN End-of-Life Care Community of Practice (CoP)

A network to provide palliative care providers and decision makers with the mechanisms to work in collaboration Goal / purpose is to improve palliative care practice in Ontario. 2007/08 MEMBERSHIP 23 Paid Caregivers 1 Unpaid Caregiver 1 Researchers 25 Policy Makers 15 Educators 1 Librarian

ros
Télécharger la présentation

SHRTN End-of-Life Care Community of Practice (CoP)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A network to provide palliative care providers and decision makers with the mechanisms to work in collaboration Goal / purpose is to improve palliative care practice in Ontario 2007/08 MEMBERSHIP 23 Paid Caregivers 1 Unpaid Caregiver 1 Researchers 25 Policy Makers 15 Educators 1 Librarian 7 Chaplains 109 Other* * Category information not available SHRTN End-of-Life CareCommunity of Practice (CoP) SHRTN End-of-Life Care Community of Practice 2007/08 Knowledge Broker: Elizabeth Lusk KTE Panel Presentation: April 1, 2008

  2. SHRTN End-of-Life Care CoPDevelopment Process • Core working group established • Clarity of purpose identified • Process and planning discussions • Work plan established to meet deliverables • Align and leverage sponsor / lead network objectives SHRTN End-of-Life Care Community of Practice 2007/08 Knowledge Broker: Elizabeth Lusk KTE Panel Presentation: April 1, 2008

  3. SHRTN End-of-Life Care CoP Identified Barriers • Understanding re: up-front investment of commitment • Clarity surrounding the role of the Knowledge Broker • SHRTN Membership process • Pressure / confusion surrounding use of technology tool, Plum Tree (did not meet the current CoP needs) • Didactic presentations prepared by content experts • Need for process surrounding sub-community development SHRTN End-of-Life Care Community of Practice 2007/08 Knowledge Broker: Elizabeth Lusk KTE Panel Presentation: April 1, 2008

  4. SHRTN End-of-Life Care CoPSuccess: DNRC Form Fireside Chats • 4 fireside chats co-facilitated by subject matter experts • Reach = 300 participants (+) • Presentation Scenarios Discussion • Moderator: Ethicist (informal*) • Evaluation / Identification of Knowledge Gaps • Next steps: • establishment of DNRC sub-community • development of self-directed DNRC Form learning modules • development of ‘Advance Care Planning’ education series SHRTN End-of-Life Care Community of Practice 2007/08 Knowledge Broker: Elizabeth Lusk KTE Panel Presentation: April 1, 2008

More Related